619 69 10MB
English Pages [1597] Year 2012
Contract Law in Australia Sixth Edition ________________________________________
J W Carter BA, LLB (Syd), Ph D (Cantab), FAAL Professor of Commercial Law, University of Sydney Consultant, Herbert Smith Freehills
LexisNexis Butterworths Australia 2013
© 2012 Ironhans Pty Limited. Under exclusive licence to Reed International Books Australia Pty Limited trading as LexisNexis. First edition 1986; Second edition 1991; Third edition 1996; Fourth edition 2002, Fifth edition 2007 This book is copyright. Except as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth), no part of this publication may be reproduced by any process, electronic or otherwise, without the specific written permission of the copyright owner. Neither may information be stored electronically in any form whatsoever without such permission. Inquiries should be addressed to the publishers. Edited and typeset in Plantin by Rosemary Peers. Printed in China. Visit LexisNexis Butterworths at www.lexisnexis.com.au
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National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Author: Title: Edition: ISBN: ISBN: ISBN: Notes: Subjects: Dewey Number:
Carter, J. W. (John W.). Contract law in Australia. 6th ed. 9780409330267 (hard) 9780409330199 (pbk) 9780409330212 (ebook) Bibliography. Includes index. 1. Contracts - Australia. I. Title. 346.9402
Preface This edition of Contract Law in Australia continues the chapter pattern which was established in the fifth edition. The principal purpose of this edition is to take account of the replacement of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) with the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth). The latter created the Australian Consumer Law. This affects a number of chapters. See [1-21]–[1-22]. Changes have been made to the titles of Chapters 11 and 24 to reflect the approach in the Australian Consumer Law. Apart from updating to reflect changes in the law, the title of Chapter 2 has been changed to reflect the role of commercial construction in relation to good faith. The book has generally been prepared on the basis of the reported cases and materials available on 1 August 2012. However, I was able to take account of the decision in Andrews v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd [2012] HCA 30 in proofs. As always I must thank Rosemary Peers for her excellent work in editing this edition. And I am pleased to acknowledge the assistance of my colleagues Professors Elisabeth Peden and Greg Tolhurst for their contributions to the major changes made in preparing the 5th edition of the work. Finally, I must record my thanks to Alison Green and Daemoni Bishop at LexisNexis for their support in the preparation of this edition. J W Carter October 2012
Table of Cases References are to paragraph numbers A v Hayden (1984) …. [25-19], [27-02] —v Pelekanakis (1999) …. [24-17] ABB Power Generation v Chapple (2001) …. [38-11] Abbott v Hessen (1913) …. [17-06] —v Lance (1860) …. [3-50] Abdurahman v Field (1987) …. [27-14] Abrahams v Herbert Reiach Ltd [1922] …. [36-18] Abram SS Co Ltd v Westville Shipping Co Ltd [1923] …. [18-23], [18-39], [1845], [18-47] Academy of Health and Fitness Pty Ltd v Power [1973] …. [18-50], [18-57] Accounting Systems 2000 (Developments) Pty Ltd v CCH Australia Ltd (1993) ... [19-09] Acron Pacific Ltd v Offshore Oil NL (1985) …. [37-08], [37-17] Actionstrength Ltd v International Glass Engineering IN GL EN Spa [2003] …. [9-02], [9-21] Adam v Newbigging (1888) …. [18-65] Adami v Maison de Luxe Ltd (1924) …. [30-37] Adams v Lindsell (1818) …. [3-32] Adamson v New South Wales Rugby League Ltd (1991) …. [26-01], [26-08] Addis v Gramophone Co Ltd [1909] …. [35-03], [35-04], [36-08] Addison v Brown [1954] …. [25-26] Adelaide Petroleum NL v Poseidon Ltd (1988) …. [19-08] Adelfamar SA v Silos E Mangimi Martini SpA (The Adelfa) [1988] …. [34-10]
Adenan v Buise [1984] …. [23-04] Adey v Fisher (1914) …. [18-28] Adler v Dickson [1955] …. [16-24], [16-26] Administration of the Territory of Papua New Guinea v Leahy (1961) …. [8-09] Administrative and Clerical Officers Association v Commonwealth (1979) …. [40-07] Aerial Advertising Co v Batchelors Peas Ltd (Manchester) [1938] …. [35-12], [35-17] Afovos Shipping Co SA v Pagnan [1983] …. [13-04], [30-06], [30-07], [30-09], [30-35] A-G v Blake [2001] …. [35-03], [36-29], [38-29] A-G (NSW) v Australian Fixed Trusts Ltd [1974] …. [3-14] —v Mutual Home Loan Fund of Australia Ltd [1971] …. [3-14] —v Peters (1924) …. [18-20], [18-22] A-G of Belize v Belize Telecom Ltd [2009] …. [2-24], [11-04], [11-06] A-G of Hong Kong v Humphreys Estate (Queen’s Gardens) Ltd [1987] …. [712], [7-13] AGC (Advances) Ltd v McWhirter (1977) …. [3-11] —v West (1984) …. [24-26] Agricultural and Rural Finance Pty Ltd v Gardiner (2008) …. [1-18], [7-29], [925], [9-27], [12-12] Ahmed v Estate and Trust Agencies (1927) Ltd [1938] …. [37-24] Ailsa Craig Fishing Co Ltd v Malvern Fishing Co Ltd [1983] …. [14-05], [1410] Air Great Lakes Pty Ltd v K S Easter (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1985) …. [1-06], [110], [1-11], [1-12], [1-13], [3-06], [8-02], [12-07], [12-08] Airways Corporation of New Zealand v Geyserland Airways Ltd [1996] …. [329]
Aiton Australia Pty Ltd v Transfield Pty Ltd (1999) …. [4-14] Ajayi v R T Briscoe (Nigeria) Ltd [1964] …. [7-08], [7-14] Akron Securities Ltd v Iliffe (1997) …. [19-16], [38-36] Alan (W J) & Co Ltd v El Nasr Export & Import Co [1972] …. [7-08], [7-16], [28-16], [31-10] Alati v Kruger (1955) …. [18-39], [18-50], [18-58], [18-71], [38-36] Albion Sugar Co Ltd v William Tankers Ltd (The John S Darbyshire) [1977] …. [5-09] Alcatel Australia Ltd v Scarcella (1998) …. [2-19], [31-17] Alcoa Minerals of Jamaica Inc v Broderick [2002] …. [35-15] Alderslade v Hendon Laundry Ltd [1945] …. [14-16], [14-17] Alec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil (Great Britain) Ltd [1985] …. [22-29], [2408], [24-09], [26-05], [26-10], [26-11], [27-33], [27-36] Alexander v Cambridge Credit Corp (1987) …. [35-20], [35-21], [35-26] —v Rayson [1936] …. [6-25], [25-22], [25-23], [27-15], [27-21] Alfred McAlpine Plc v BAI (Run-Off) Ltd [2000] …. [32-02] Alghussein Establishment v Eton College [1988] …. [31-01] Allan v Gotch (1883) …. [18-09], [18-16], [18-21], [18-27] Allan (J M) (Merchandising) Ltd v Cloke [1963] …. [25-21] Allcard v Skinner (1887) …. [23-01], [23-04], [23-08], [23-09], [23-11], [23-12] —v Walker [1896] …. [20-09], [20-27], [20-28] Allcars Pty Ltd v Tweedle [1937] …. [4-04] Allen v Allen (1842) …. [15-08] —v Carbone (1975) …. [5-05] —v F O’Hearn & Co [1937] …. [16-06] —v Richardson (1879) …. [20-28] Alliance & Leicester Building Society v Edgestop Ltd [1993] …. [18-68], [1877]
Alliance Acceptance Co Ltd v Hinton (1964) …. [15-05], [15-13] Alliance Bank v Broom (1864) …. [6-55] Allied Marine Transport Ltd v Vale do Rio Doce Navegacao SA (The Leonides D) [1985] …. [1-11], [1-12], [3-29], [6-54], [7-15], [31-12] Allied Mills Ltd v Gwydir Valley Oilseeds Pty Ltd [1978] …. [33-46] Allison v Hewitt (1974) …. [36-21] Alpha Trading Ltd v Dunnshaw-Patten Ltd [1981] …. [11-09], [30-65], [37-02] Alucraft Pty Ltd v Grocon Ltd (1994) …. [35-07] Aluminium Products (Qld) Pty Ltd v Hill [1981] …. [18-36] Amalgamated Collieries of WA Ltd v True (1938) …. [28-28] Amalgamated Investment & Property Co Ltd v John Walker & Sons Ltd [1976] …. [33-33], [33-55] —v Texas Commerce International Bank Ltd [1982] …. [7-05], [7-11], [7-13], [7-21], [7-22], [12-20] Amann Aviation Pty Ltd v Commonwealth (1990) …. [30-36], [31-04], [31-17] Ambassador Refrigeration Pty Ltd v Trocadero Building and Investment Co Pty Ltd [1968] …. [25-14] Amcor Ltd v Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union (2005) …. [1206] American Express International Inc v Commissioner of State Revenue (2004) …. [28-16] AMEV Finance Ltd v Artes Studios Thoroughbreds Pty Ltd (1989) …. [37-17] AMEV-UDC Finance Ltd v Austin (1986) …. [36-15], [37-07], [37-11], [37-12], [37-17] Amey v Fifar [1971] …. [15-56] Amherst v James Walker Goldsmith & Silversmith Ltd [1983] …. [29-12] Amiri Flight Authority v BAE Systems Plc [2003] …. [10-17] Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) …. [26-02], [26-03], [26-04], [26-05], [26-06], [26-07], [26-08], [26-11], [26-13], [26-19], [27-33]
—v—(No 2) [1975] …. [27-30], [27-33] Amphitrite, The [1921] …. [15-60] Amwad v Geraghty (a firm) [2001] …. [27-28] Anaconda Nickel Ltd v Tarmoola Australia Pty Ltd (2000) …. [4-02], [4-03], [4-09], [5-06] Andar Transport Pty Ltd v Brambles Ltd (2004) …. [1-18], [12-04], [14-17] André et Compagnie SA v Marine Transocean Ltd [1981] …. [34-02] Andrew Shelton & Co Pty Ltd v Alpha Healthcare Ltd (2002) …. [38-18] Andrews v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd [2012] …. [37-07], [37-16] —v Hopkinson [1957] …. [10-14], [35-38] —v Parker [1973] …. [25-32], [27-03], [27-12] Ange v First East Auction Holdings Pty Ltd (2011) …. [33-40] Angel v Jay [1911] …. [18-54], [18-55] Angelatos v National Australia Bank (1994) …. [19-16] Anglia Television Ltd v Reed [1972] …. [36-01] Anglo-African Shipping Co of New York Inc v J Mortner Ltd [1962] …. [37-24] Ankar Pty Ltd v National Westminster Finance (Australia) Ltd (1987) …. [1-13], [1-19], [13-10], [13-17], [28-38], [30-11], [30-17], [30-18], [30-19], [30-52] Anning v Anning (1907) …. [17-07], [17-11] Anon (1455) …. [6-56] Anon (1495) …. [6-56] Ansett Transport Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd v Australian Federation of Air Pilots (No 2) [1991] …. [28-28] Antaios Compania Naviera SA v Salen Rederierna AB [1983] …. [12-04], [1309], [30-09], [31-18] —v—[1985] …. [2-23], [31-18] Antclizo Shipping Corp v Food Corp of India [1992] …. [2-17]
Antonovic v Volker (1986) …. [24-12], [24-24] ANZ Executors & Trustees Ltd v Humes Ltd [1990] …. [39-05], [39-10] Aotearoa International Ltd v Scancarriers A/S [1985] …. [4-11] Appleby v Johnson (1874) …. [3-20] —v Myers (1867) …. [34-10], [34-18], [34-27] Apriaden Pty Ltd v Seacrest Pty Ltd (2000) …. [30-36] Aqua-Max Pty Ltd v MT Associates Pty Ltd (2001) …. [31-05] Aramis, The [1989] …. [16-26] Archbolds (Freightage) Ltd v S Spanglett Ltd [1961] …. [25-11], [25-13], [2522], [27-01], [27-11] Archer v Brown [1985] …. [36-09] —v Stone (1898) …. [20-42] Arcos Ltd v E A Ronaasen & Son [1933] …. [11-19], [28-13] Arcric Investments Pty Ltd v Ductline Pty Ltd (1992) …. [19-05] Ardlethan Options Ltd v Easdown (1915) …. [35-36] Argy v Blunts & Lane Cove Real Estate Pty Ltd (1990) …. [18-34], [19-04] Aristoc Industries Pty Ltd v R A Wenham (Builders) Pty Ltd [1965] …. [9-11], [39-05] Arkwright v Newbold (1881) …. [18-16] Armitage v Nurse [1998] …. [14-09] Armstrong v Jackson [1917] …. [18-54], [18-55] Arnison v Smith (1889) …. [18-24], [18-27] Aroney v Christianus (1915) …. [15-17], [15-18] Arrale v Costain Civil Engineering Ltd [1976] …. [6-15] ASA Constructions Pty Ltd v Iwanov [1975] …. [36-21], [36-28] Ash Street Properties Pty Ltd v Pollnow (1987) …. [9-21] Ashby v Tolhurst [1937] …. [14-15] Ashcoast Pty Ltd v Whillans (1998) …. [26-16]
Ashington Piggeries Ltd v Christopher Hill Ltd [1972] …. [11-19], [11-21] Asia Pacific International Pty Ltd v Dalrymple [2000] …. [24-27] Associated Distributors Ltd v Hall [1938] …. [37-16] Associated Japanese Bank (International) Ltd v Credit du Nord SA [1989] …. [20-20], [20-24], [20-29] Associated Midland Corp Ltd v Bank of NSW (1984) …. [3-27] Associated Newspapers Ltd v Bancks (1951) …. [12-05], [12-06], [30-15], [3016], [30-37] Astley v Austrust Ltd (1999) …. [1-07], [1-18], [11-16], [29-17], [35-04], [3524], [35-29], [35-31] —v Reynolds (1731) …. [22-09] Astley Industrial Trust Ltd v Grimley [1963] …. [30-27], [30-58] Atco Controls Pty Ltd (in liq) v Newtronics Pty Ltd (Recs & Mgs apptd) (in liq) (2009) …. [8-01] Athens-MacDonald Travel Service Pty Ltd v Kazis [1970] …. [36-09] Atkins v Hill (1775) …. [6-06] Atlantic Shipping & Trading Ltd v Louis Dreyfus & Co [1922] …. [7-24] Atlas Express Ltd v Kafco (Importers and Distributors) Ltd [1989] …. [22-10], [22-12], [22-22] Atlas Tiles Ltd v Briers (1978) …. [36-23] Atlee v Backhouse (1838) …. [22-09] Attica Sea Carriers Corp v Ferrostaal Poseidon Bulk Reederei GmbH [1976] …. [37-24] Attwood v Lamont [1920] …. [27-31], [27-35] Aubergine Enterprises Ltd v Lakewood International Ltd [2002] …. [31-08] Aurel Forras Pty Ltd v Graham Karp Developments Pty Ltd [1975] …. [34-04] Aussie Invest Corp Ltd v Pulcesia Pty Ltd (2005) …. [38-34] Austin v Sheldon [1974] …. [33-13], [33-33] Austotel Pty Ltd v Franklins Selfserve Pty Ltd (1989) …. [7-13], [7-14], [38-17]
Austra Tanks Pty Ltd v Running [1982] …. [27-38] Austral Standard Cables Pty Ltd v Walker Nominees Pty Ltd (1992) …. [7-14], [30-45], [30-47] Australasian Brokerage Ltd v ANZ Banking Corp Ltd (1934) …. [18-66] Australasian Performing Right Association Ltd v Austarama Television Pty Ltd [1972] …. [21-04], [21-08] Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Compagnie d’Assurances Maritimes Aeriennes et Terrestres [1996] …. [13-07] —v Frost Holdings Pty Ltd [1989] …. [4-11] —v Karam (2005) …. [22-11], [22-19], [22-21], [23-16], [24-12] —v Westpac Banking Corp (1988) …. [38-08] —v Widin (1990) …. [9-15], [9-21], [9-22] Australia Hotel Co Ltd v Moore (1899) …. [20-53], [21-11] Australian Bank Ltd v Stokes (1985) …. [24-22] Australian Bank of Commerce Ltd v Perel [1926] …. [28-16] Australian Breeders Co-operative Society Ltd v Jones (1997) …. [27-32], [2737] Australian Broadcasting Corp v Redmore Pty Ltd (1989) …. [25-09], [25-13] Australian Capital Territory v Munday (2000) …. [26-04] Australian Competition & Consumer Commission v Australian Safeway Stores Pty Ltd (2003) …. [8-01] —v Baxter Healthcare Pty Ltd (2007) …. [26-23] —v C G Berbatis Holdings Pty Ltd (2003) …. [1-18], [22-04], [24-16] —v Leelee Pty Ltd (2000) …. [24-17] —v Samton Holdings Pty Ltd (2002) …. [24-11], [24-19] —v Simply No-Knead (Franchising) Pty Ltd (2000) …. [24-19] —v Telstra Corp Ltd (ACN 051 775 556) (2007) …. [19-05] Australian Energy Ltd v Lennard Oil NL [1986] …. [12-18]
Australian Gypsum Ltd v Hume Steel Ltd (1930) …. [21-04], [21-07] Australian Hardwoods Pty Ltd v Commissioner for Railways [1961] …. [39-01], [39-07] Australian Meat Industry Employees’ Union v Frugalis Pty Ltd [1990] …. [1108] Australian Medic-Care Co Ltd v Hamilton Pharmaceutical Pty Ltd (2009) …. [38-29] Australian Mutual Provident Society v 400 St Kilda Road Pty Ltd [1991] …. [28-09] Australian National Airlines Commission v Robinson [1977] …. [28-11], [2839] Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Fortescue Metals Group Ltd (2011) …. [4-14], [19-08] Australian Steel & Mining Corp Pty Ltd v Corben [1974] …. [18-20], [18-24] Australian Woollen Mills Pty Ltd v Commonwealth (1954) …. [3-07], [6-11], [6-18], [8-09] Australis Media Holdings Pty Ltd v Telstra Corp Ltd (1998) …. [4-14], [11-13] Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v Watson (1946) …. [28-07], [30-30], [3101], [35-12], [37-21], [37-30], [38-22] Avery v Bowden (1856) …. [34-07] Avon County Council v Howlett [1983] …. [20-09] Avon Finance Co Ltd v Bridger (1979) …. [21-18], [23-09] Awwad v Geraghty (a firm) [2000] …. [25-30] Ayerst v Jenkins (1873) …. [27-21] B & B Constructions (Aust) Pty Ltd v Brian A Cheeseman & Associates Pty Ltd (1994) …. [12-23] B & S Contracts and Design Ltd v Victor Green Publications Ltd [1984] …. [2214], [22-22] Babsari Pty Ltd v Wong [2000] …. [1-11] Baburin v Baburin [1991] …. [24-13]
Bacchus Marsh Concentrated Milk Co Ltd v Joseph Nathan & Co Ltd (1919) …. [12-13], [12-23], [21-06], [26-09], [26-13] Bacon v Purcell (1916) …. [12-14], [28-23] Bahr v Nicolay (No 2) (1988) …. [5-04], [12-03], [12-10], [12-11], [12-13], [1623], [28-11], [39-07] Bain v Fothergill (1874) …. [20-30], [35-11], [36-21] Bainbrigge v Browne (1881) …. [23-05], [23-08] Baird v BCE Holdings Pty Ltd (1996) …. [18-55] Baker v Jones [1954] …. [25-26] —v Taylor (1906) …. [3-51] Bal v Van Standen [1902] …. [3-32] Balbosa v Ali [1990] …. [13-18] Balfour v Balfour [1919] …. [1-09], [8-03] —v Hollandia Ravensthorpe NL (1978) …. [18-08], [18-46] Ballantyne v Phillott (1961) …. [6-51], [6-52] —v Raphael (1889) …. [18-16], [18-20], [18-24], [18-27] Ballas v Theopilos [1958] …. [3-48] —v—(No 2) (1957) …. [3-20], [3-22], [3-48], [3-55] Ballett v Mingay [1943] …. [15-24] Balmain New Ferry Co Ltd v Robertson (1906) …. [10-16] Balog v Crestani (1975) …. [30-61], [30-63] Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1991) …. [24-19], [2427] —v—(1993) …. [1-18], [24-19], [24-27], [28-23], [28-32], [34-11], [35-24], [36-08], [36-09], [38-03], [38-14], [38-21], [38-24], [38-36] —v Merchant ‘Mikhail Lermontov’ (1994) …. [6-32], [6-52] Banco de Portugal v Waterlow & Sons Ltd [1932] …. [35-36] Banfield v Wells-Eicke (1964) …. [15-57]
Bangladesh Export Import Co Ltd v Sucden Kerry SA [1995] …. [33-21] Bank Line Ltd v Arthur Capel & Co [1919] …. [33-04], [33-26], [33-27], [3330], [33-40], [33-55], [33-56], [34-02], [34-03] Bank of America Australia Ltd v Ceda Jon International Pty Ltd (1988) …. [2623] Bank of Australasia v Adams (1890) …. [18-11] —v Palmer [1897] …. [12-05], [12-08] Bank of Boston Connecticut v European Grain & Shipping Ltd (The Dominique) [1989] …. [32-01], [34-06], [34-11], [37-26], [37-30] Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA v Ali [2002] …. [6-54], [12-14] Bank of India v Trans Continental Commodity Merchants Ltd [1982] …. [25-03] Bank of New South Wales v Rogers (1941) …. [23-05], [23-08] Bank of New Zealand v Simpson [1900] …. [12-17] Bank of Nova Scotia v Hellenic Mutual War Risks Association (Bermuda) Ltd (The Good Luck) [1992] …. [11-05], [11-16], [32-02] —v Kelly (1973) …. [15-44] —v MacLellan (1977) …. [6-39] Banks v Williams (1912) …. [3-17], [3-26] Bannerman v White (1861) …. [18-61] Banning v Wright [1972] …. [31-06] Banque Brussels Lambert SA v Australian National Industries Ltd (1989) …. [10-10], [13-01] Barac v Farnell (1994) …. [25-31] Barba v Gas & Fuel Corp of Victoria (1976) …. [6-25], [12-21] Barbados Trust Co Ltd (formerly CI Trustees (Asia Pacific) Ltd) v Bank of Zambia [2007] …. [17-11] Barber v Fox (1682) …. [6-19] Barclay v Messenger (1874) …. [31-05] Barclays Bank Plc v Boulter [1999] …. [23-05]
—v Fairclough Building Ltd [1995] …. [35-32] —v O’Brien [1994] …. [23-05] Barnard v Australian Soccer Federation (1988) …. [26-01] Barnes & Co v Toye (1884) …. [15-10] Barnett v Ira L & A C Berk Pty Ltd (1952) …. [6-27] Barns v Queensland National Bank Ltd (1906) …. [7-09] Barr v Gibson (1838) …. [20-16] Barr’s Contract, Re [1956] …. [30-62] Barrier Wharfs Ltd v W Scott Fell & Co Ltd (1908) …. [12-12] Barroora Pty Ltd v Provincial Insurance Ltd (1992) …. [16-19] Barrow Lane & Ballard Ltd v Phillip Phillips & Co Ltd [1929] …. [20-19] Barry v Davies [2000] …. [3-11] Barton v Armstrong [1973] …. [22-02], [22-05], [22-06], [22-08], [22-18], [2229] Basildon DC v J E Lesser (Properties) Ltd [1985] …. [35-32] Bassin v Standen (1945) …. [25-09], [27-21] Bastard v McCallum [1924] …. [3-22], [3-24] Bateman v Slayter (1987) …. [19-08] Batt v Onslow (1892) …. [3-26], [3-35] Baume v Commonwealth (1906) …. [35-06] Baxton v Kara [1982] …. [39-09] Baytur SA v Finagro Holding SA [1992] …. [17-08] BB Australia Pty Ltd v Karioi Pty Ltd (2010) …. [26-18] Beard v Baulkham Hills Shire Council (1986) …. [25-29] —v Wratislaw (1991) …. [28-15] Beaton v McDivitt (1987) …. [6-08], [6-11], [6-15], [8-12], [33-38] Beaumont v Helvetic Investment Corp Pty Ltd (1982) …. [24-22], [24-25]
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45] Dennant v Skinner & Collom [1948] …. [20-45] Denny v Hancock (1870) …. [39-11] Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd v James B Fraser & Co Ltd [1944] …. [33-04], [3306], [33-07], [33-24], [33-27], [33-32], [33-50], [33-51], [34-02] Dent v Bennett (1839) …. [23-08] Denton v Great Northern Railway Co (1856) …. [3-08], [6-17] Derbyshire Building Co Pty Ltd v Becker (1962) …. [11-23], [29-15] Derry v Peek (1889) …. [18-25], [18-30] Deta Nominees Pty Ltd v Viscount Plastic Products Pty Ltd [1979] …. [9-17] Deutsche Genossenschaftsbank v Burnhope [1995] …. [12-03] Deutsche Schachtbau-und Tiefbohrgesellschaft mbH v Shell International Petroleum Co Ltd [1990] …. [8-02] Devefi Pty Ltd v Mateffy Pearl Nagy Pty Ltd (1993) …. [17-10], [17-11] Devenish Nutrition Ltd v Sanofi-Aventis SA [2009] …. [38-29] Devis (W) & Sons Ltd v Atkins [1977] …. [31-03] Dewar v Mintoft [1912] …. [37-36] Dewhurst & Kay Rent-A-Car Pty Ltd v Budget Rent-A-Car System Pty Ltd (1985) …. [19-07] Dewhurst (W A) & Co Pty Ltd v Cawrse [1960] …. [3-05] Di Biase v Rezek [1971] …. [9-13], [9-15] Di Dio Nominees Pty Ltd v Brian Mark Real Estate Pty Ltd [1992] …. [12-04] Diamond v Moore (1931) …. [30-36] Dick Bentley Productions Ltd v Harold Smith (Motors) Ltd [1965] …. [10-10] Dickinson v Dodds (1876) …. [3-07], [3-44], [3-57] Dickson (G C) & Yorston (Builders) Pty Ltd v Hattam [1935] …. [25-03] Dies v British and International Mining and Finance Corp Ltd [1939] …. [38-24] Dillon v Charter Travel Co Ltd (1989) …. [24-24], [36-09]
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Gibaud v Great Eastern Railway Co [1921] …. [14-15] Gibb v Sell [1922] …. [9-10] Gibbons v Wright (1954) …. [15-37], [15-38], [15-39], [21-13] Gilbert J McCaul (Aust) Pty Ltd v Pitt Club Ltd (1957) …. [3-47], [3-56], [2837] Gilbert-Ash (Northern) Ltd v Modern Engineering (Bristol) Ltd [1974] …. [2825], [28-39] Giles v Thompson [1994] …. [25-29], [25-30] Giliberto v Kenny (1983) …. [10-19], [12-22] Gill v Australian Wheat Board [1980] …. [36-23] Gillespie Bros & Co Ltd v Cheney Eggar & Co [1896] …. [12-08], [12-19] —v Roy Bowles Transport Ltd [1973] …. [14-16], [14-17], [14-18] Gimson v Victorian Workcover Authority [1995] …. [29-02] Gino D’Alessandro Constructions Pty Ltd v Powis [1987] …. [9-20] Gipps v Gipps [1978] …. [18-22] Giumelli v Giumelli (1999) …. [1-18], [7-05], [7-16], [7-19] Gjergja v Cooper [1987] …. [3-17], [3-39] Glaholm v Hays (1841) …. [28-32] Glasbrook Bros Ltd v Glamorgan County Council [1925] …. [6-43] Glass v Pioneer Rubber Works of Australia Ltd [1906] …. [3-05] Glazebrook v Woodrow (1799) …. [28-30] Glebe Island Terminals Pty Ltd v Continental Seagram Pty Ltd (The Antwerpen) (1993) …. [14-15], [14-17] Glegg v Bromley [1912] …. [17-12], [25-29] Glencore Grain Ltd v Agros Trading Co [1999] …. [17-07] —v Flacker Shipping Ltd (The Happy Day) [2002] …. [7-26] Glencore Grain Rotterdam BV v Lebanese Organisation for International Commerce [1997] …. [31-17]
Glencore International AG v Ryan (The Beursgracht) [2002] …. [30-26] Global Sportsman Pty Ltd v Mirror Newspapers Ltd (1984) …. [19-08] Gloucestershire CC v Richardson [1969] …. [11-15] Glynn v Margetson & Co [1893] …. [14-13] Goddard, Ex parte; Re Falvey (1946) …. [15-56] Godecke v Kirwan (1973) …. [4-10], [5-04] Gold Coast Waterways Authority v Salmead Pty Ltd [1997] …. [5-08] Goldburg v Shell Oil of Australia Ltd (1990) …. [35-11] Goldcorp Exchange Ltd, Re [1995] …. [38-02] Golden Strait Corp v Nippon Yusen Kubishika Kaisha [2006] …. [36-17] Goldsbrough Mort & Co Ltd v Carter (1914) …. [12-03], [33-12], [33-55], [3404] —v Quinn (1910) …. [20-35], [20-37], [36-25], [39-11] Goldsmith v Rodger [1962] …. [18-54], [18-61] Gollan v Nugent (1988) …. [25-19], [27-05], [27-21], [27-23], [27-24] Gollin & Co Ltd v Consolidated Fertilizer Sales Pty Ltd [1982] …. [7-09] —v Karenlee Nominees Pty Ltd (1983) …. [29-12] Gompertz v Bartlett (1853) …. [20-21] Gonin deceased, Re [1979] …. [8-04] Good v Cheeseman (1831) …. [6-60] Goode v Harrison (1821) …. [15-17] Goodman v Pocock (1850) …. [37-33], [38-22] Goodwin’s of Newtown Pty Ltd v Gurry [1959] …. [3-14] Gordon v Macgregor (1909) …. [12-05], [12-06], [12-08] Gore v Gibson (1845) …. [15-39] Gorer v Readon (1869) …. [15-10] Goring v Goring (1602) …. [6-56]
Goss v Chilcott [1996] …. [38-06] —v Nugent (1833) …. [12-05] Gould v Gould [1970] …. [4-09], [8-03] —v Vaggelas (1984) …. [18-21], [18-67], [18-68], [18-69] Government of Newfoundland v Newfoundland Railway Co (1888) …. [28-26], [37-33] Government of Swaziland Central Transport Administration v Leila Maritime Co Ltd (The Leila) [1985] …. [7-21] Gozzard v McKell (1931) …. [25-03] GR Securities Pty Ltd v Baulkham Hills Private Hospital Pty Ltd (1996) …. [506] Graham v Baker (1961) …. [28-07] —v Freer (1980) …. [18-61], [18-78] —v Royal National Agricultural and Industrial Association of Queensland 1989] …. [14-17] —v Voigt (1989) …. [36-09] Grainger v Gough [1896] …. [3-08] Gran Gelato Ltd v Richcliff (Group) Ltd [1992] …. [18-77] Granitgard Pty Ltd v Termicide Pest Control Pty Ltd (2011) …. [19-18] Grant v Australian Knitting Mills Ltd [1936] …. [11-19], [11-20], [11-21], [2916] —v Dawkins [1973] …. [36-27], [36-28] Graves v Legg (1854) …. [28-11], [28-30] Gray (dec’d), Re [2005] …. [28-37] —v Lang (1955) …. [9-27] —v Motor Accident Commission (formerly State Government Insurance Commission) (1998) …. [35-03] —v Pastorelli [1987] …. [25-22] Great Northern Railway Co v Witham (1873) …. [3-23], [3-49]
Great Peace Shipping Ltd v Tsavliris Salvage (International) Ltd [2003] …. [2029], [33-55] Greater Pacific Investments Pty Ltd v Australian National Industries Ltd (1996) ... [18-45] Greaves & Co (Contractors) Ltd v Baynham Meikle & Partners [1975] …. [1113], [29-17] Green v Duckett (1883) …. [22-09] —v Green (1989) …. [25-19] —v Rose (1900) …. [3-11] —v Sevin (1879) …. [30-60] —v Sommerville (1979) …. [30-41] —v Thompson [1899] …. [15-11] Greenwood v Martins Bank Ltd [1933] …. [7-15] Greetings Oxford Koala Hotel Pty Ltd v Oxford Square Investments Pty Ltd (1989) …. [39-08] Gregory v MAB Pty Ltd (1989) …. [4-13], [5-09], [14-13] Griffith v Brymer (1903) …. [20-10] Griffiths v Knight [1960] …. [6-55] Grineff v Chusov [2000] …. [24-14] Groom v Crocker [1939] …. [35-31] Groser v Equity Trustees Ltd (2008) …. [33-15] Grummitt v Natalisio [1968] …. [9-14], [9-23] Grundt v Great Boulder Pty Gold Mines Ltd (1937) …. [2-20], [7-03], [7-04], [12-20], [31-09] GSA Group Pty Ltd v Siebe Plc (1993) …. [28-09] Gull v Saunders (1913) …. [35-28] Gumland Property Holdings Pty Ltd v Duffy Bros Fruit Market (Cambelltown) Pty Ltd (2008) …. [1-18], [30-11], [30-36], [36-15] Gunton v Richmond-upon-Thames London BC [1981] …. [31-01]
Gurdag v BS Stillwell Ford Pty Ltd (1985) …. [19-11] Gurney v Wormersley (1854) …. [20-21] Guy-Pell v Foster [1930] …. [30-45] Habib Bank Ltd v Habib Bank AG Zurich [1981] …. [7-13] Hadley v Baxendale (1854) …. [2-10], [11-37], [35-08], [35-09], [35-23], [3524], [35-25], [35-27], [35-28], [35-38], [35-40], [35-42], [35-44], [36-01], [36-07] Haigh v Brooks (1839) …. [6-50] Hain SS Co Ltd v Tate & Lyle Ltd [1936] …. [14-08], [14-14], [31-06] Halfpenny v Wilson (1967) …. [30-63] Halkett v Earl of Dudley [1907] …. [31-18], [39-08], [39-09] Halkidis v Bugeia [1974] …. [30-62] Hall v Busst (1960) …. [4-11] —v Gilmore [1968] …. [5-05] —v Wells [1962] …. [15-23] Halliday v High Performance Personnel Pty Ltd (1993) …. [25-29] Halloran v Firth (1926) …. [33-36] Hamer v Sidway 124 NY 538 (1891) …. [6-08] Hamilton v Lethbridge (1912) …. [15-11], [15-13], [15-15], [15-17] Hammer v Coca-Cola [1962] …. [30-38] Hamond v Vam Ltd [1972] …. [4-03] Hanave Pty Ltd v Lfot Pty Ltd (1999) …. [19-10] Hanley v Pease & Partners Ltd [1915] …. [28-39] Harbutt’s ‘Plasticine’ Ltd v Wayne Tank and Pump Co Ltd [1970] …. [30-26], [31-01], [32-09], [36-11] Hardie and Lane Ltd v Chilton [1928] …. [22-19] Hardie (Qld) Employees Credit Union Ltd v Hall Chadwick & Co [1980] …. [18-36]
Hardman v Booth (1863) …. [20-41] Hardwick Game Farm v Suffolk Agricultural Poultry Producers Association [1966] …. [12-08] Hardy v Motor Insurers’ Bureau [1964] …. [27-05] Hare v Nicoll [1966] …. [28-37] Harkins v Butcher (2002) …. [39-11] Harling v Eddy [1951] …. [10-07] Harlingdon and Leinster Enterprises Ltd v Christopher Hull Fine Art Ltd [1991] …. [11-19], [11-21] Harnedy v National Greyhound Racing Co Ltd [1944] …. [15-13] Harnor v Groves (1855) …. [12-08] Harper v Ashtons Circus Pty Ltd [1972] …. [35-30] Harrington v Browne (1917) …. [30-19], [30-52] Harris v Digital Pulse Pty Ltd (2003) …. [35-03] —v Jenkins [1922] …. [3-51] —v Nickerson (1873) …. [3-11], [3-15] Harrison & Jones Ltd v Bunten & Lancaster Ltd [1953] …. [20-25] Harrison (T & J) v Knowles and Foster [1918] …. [18-38] Harry Davies & Co Pty Ltd v East [1925] …. [28-08] Harse v Pearl Life Assurance Co [1904] …. [27-14], [27-16], [27-27] Hart v MacDonald (1910) …. [11-11], [12-08] —v O’Connor [1985] …. [15-41], [24-12] —v Swaine (1877) …. [18-55] Hartley v Hymans [1920] …. [9-27] —v Ponsonby (1857) …. [6-45] Hartog v Colin & Shields [1939] …. [20-51], [20-54] Harvela Investments Ltd v Royal Trust Co of Canada (CI) Ltd [1986] …. [3-12] Harvey v Edwards Dunlop & Co Ltd (1927) …. [9-13], [9-15]
—v Facey [1893] …. [3-09] Hasan v Willson [1977] …. [6-33] Hasell v Bagot Shakes & Lewis Ltd (1911) …. [35-42] Hasham v Zenab [1960] …. [39-02] Hastie v Couturier (1853) …. [20-16] Hatcher v White (1953) …. [27-13], [27-28] Hawker Pacific Pty Ltd v Helicopter Charter Pty Ltd (1991) …. [7-16], [7-18], [22-10], [22-27] Hawkes v Saunders (1782) …. [6-06] Hawkins v Clayton (1988) …. [11-06], [11-16], [18-30], [18-31], [18-67], [2915] Hawthorn Football Club Ltd v Harding [1988] …. [40-04], [40-08] Hayes v Cable (1962) …. [25-13] Haynes v McNeil (1906) …. [3-05] Hazzell v Hammersmith & Fulham LBC [1992] …. [15-59] Head v Kelk (1963) …. [9-19], [28-17] Healing Sales Pty Ltd v Inglis Electrix Pty Ltd (1968) …. [1-05] Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd [1964] …. [1-07], [10-04], [1830], [18-31], [18-32], [18-33], [18-34], [18-35], [18-78] Heilbut Symons & Co v Buckleton [1913] …. [10-11] Heimann v Commonwealth (1938) …. [11-02], [11-03], [11-08], [11-13] Heine Bros (Aust) Pty Ltd v Forrest [1963] …. [26-16], [40-08] Heisler v Anglo-Dal Ltd [1954] …. [31-03] Helicopter Sales (Australia) Pty Ltd v Rotor-Work Pty Ltd (1974) …. [11-16] Hempel v Robinson [1924] …. [4-10] Henderson, Re (1916) …. [15-24] —v Merrett Syndicates Ltd [1995] …. [11-16], [18-30], [18-36] Henjo Investments Pty Ltd v Collins Marrickville Pty Ltd (1988) …. [19-16]
Henkel v Pape (1870) …. [20-34] Henry v Sydney MC (1882) …. [15-52] Henry Kendall & Sons v William Lillico & Sons Ltd [1969] …. [10-18], [1121], [12-08] Hensley v Reschke (1914) …. [30-29] Henthorn v Fraser [1892] …. [3-17], [3-31], [3-35], [3-44] Henville v Walker (2001) …. [19-13], [19-14], [35-21] Heppingstone v Stewart (1910) …. [9-13], [39-03] Herbert Clayton and Jack Waller Ltd v Oliver [1930] …. [36-10] Herbert Morris Ltd v Saxelby [1916] …. [26-06], [26-07], [26-16] Hercules Motors Pty Ltd v Schubert (1953) …. [6-51], [10-11] Hermann v Charlesworth [1905] …. [25-33], [27-16], [27-17] Herne Bay Steam Boat Co v Hutton [1903] …. [33-19] Hewett v Court (1983) …. [9-11], [18-61], [39-02], [39-10] Hewitt v Debus (2004) …. [29-12] Heydon v NRMA Ltd (2000) …. [29-15] Heyman v Darwins Ltd [1942] …. [14-14], [30-06], [30-30], [30-46], [31-02], [31-04], [32-01], [32-10] Heywood v Wellers [1976] …. [36-08] Hick v Raymond [1893] …. [28-04] Hickman v Berens [1895] …. [20-53] Higgons v Burton (1857) …. [20-42] HIH Casualty and General Insurance Ltd v Chase Manhattan Bank [2003] …. [14-06], [14-17] Hill v C A Parsons & Co Ltd [1972] …. [40-08] Hill (D J) & Co Pty Ltd v Walter H Wright Pty Ltd [1971] …. [10-15], [10-18] Hill (t/a R F Hill & Associates) v Van Erp (1997) …. [1-07], [16-23], [18-30], [18-31], [18-33], [18-34]
Hillas & Co Ltd v Arcos Ltd (1932) …. [4-02], [4-03], [4-05], [4-12], [4-14], [638] Hinton v Sparkes (1868) …. [37-36] Hirachand Punamchand v Temple [1911] …. [6-59], [6-60], [28-18] Hirji Mulji v Cheong Yue SS Co Ltd [1926] …. [33-09], [33-13], [33-50], [3351], [34-02], [34-06] Hirsch v The Zinc Corp Ltd (1917) …. [33-56], [34-04], [34-06], [34-09] Hitchcock v Giddings (1817) …. [20-28] Hoad v Scone Motors Pty Ltd [1977] …. [35-34] —v Swan (1920) …. [30-42], [31-04] Hobartville Stud Pty Ltd v Union Insurance Co Ltd (1991) …. [36-07] Hobbs v London and South Western Railway Co (1875) …. [36-08] —v Petersham Transport Co Pty Ltd (1971) …. [29-03], [29-17] Hobbs Padgett & Co (Reinsurance) Ltd v J C Kirkland Ltd [1969] …. [4-04] Hochster v De la Tour (1853) …. [30-32], [30-37] Hodder v Watters [1946] …. [18-41], [38-24] Hoenig v Isaacs [1952] …. [28-31], [28-32], [28-34] Hoffman, Re; Ex parte Worrell v Schilling (1989) …. [18-48] —v Cali [1985] …. [36-14] —v Red Owl Stores Inc (1965) …. [7-23] Holidaywise Koala Pty Ltd v Queenslodge Pty Ltd [1977] …. [25-21] Holland v Eyre (1824) …. [3-22] —v Wiltshire (1954) …. [29-12], [31-04], [32-01] Hollier v Rambler Motors (AMC) Ltd [1972] …. [10-18], [14-17] Hollins v Russell [2003] …. [25-30] Hollywood Premiere Sales Pty Ltd v Faberge Australia (Pty) Ltd (1976) …. [2621] Holman v Johnson (1775) …. [27-05], [27-09], [27-10]
Holmes v Burgess [1975] …. [18-61] —v Jones (1907) …. [18-22], [18-69], [18-71] Holt v Biroka (1988) …. [19-08] Holwell Securities Ltd v Hughes [1974] …. [3-31], [3-32], [3-34] Home Counties Dairies Ltd v Skilton [1970] …. [26-16], [32-10] Hong Kong Bank of Australia Ltd v Larobi Pty Ltd (1991) …. [25-26] Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd [1962] …. [1308], [13-09], [13-11], [13-13], [13-15], [14-07], [28-32], [30-11], [30-17], [30-18], [30-25], [30-26], [30-27], [30-48], [30-57], [30-58], [31-12], [3302], [33-50] Honner v Ashton (1979) …. [30-12], [30-32], [30-34], [30-43] Hoobin, Re [1957] …. [38-33] Hood v Anchor Line (Henderson Bros) Ltd [1918] …. [3-08], [10-17] Hooker (L J) Ltd v W J Adams Estates Pty Ltd (1977) …. [11-09] Hooker Town Developments Pty Ltd v Director of War Service Homes (1973) …. [21-04], [21-08] Hooley Hill Rubber and Chemical Co Ltd and Royal Insurance Co Ltd, Re [1920] …. [18-09], [18-10] Hooper & Grass’ Contract, Re [1949] …. [22-12], [22-16] Hope v RCA Photophone of Australia Pty Ltd (1937) …. [12-07], [12-08], [1218] Hopkinson v Logan (1839) …. [6-28] Hordern House Pty Ltd v Arnold [1989] …. [3-11] Horlock v Beal [1916] …. [33-03], [33-11], [33-15], [33-28], [33-54], [34-10] Horne v Barber (1920) …. [25-24] Horsfall v Thomas (1862) …. [18-18] Hortico (Australia) Pty Ltd v Energy Equipment Co (Australia) Pty Ltd (1985) …. [9-07] Horton v Jones (1934) …. [9-20], [12-18]
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Hudson v Jope (1914) …. [18-50], [18-54], [18-55], [20-27], [20-28] Huggins v Wiseman (1690) …. [15-11] Hughes v Greenwich London Borough Council [1994] …. [11-08] —v Lord Advocate [1963] …. [35-26] —v Metropolitan Railway Co (1877) …. [7-08], [7-09], [7-29], [31-08] —v NM Superannuation Pty Ltd (1993) …. [5-05] —v Western Australian Cricket Association (Inc) (1986) …. [26-03] Hughes Aircraft Systems International v Airservices Australia (1997) …. [3-12], [15-60] Hughes Bros Pty Ltd v Trustees of the Roman Catholic Church for the Archdiocese of Sydney (1993) …. [31-17] Humphries v Proprietors ‘Surfers Palms North’ Group Titles Plan 1955 (1994) …. [27-30] Hungerfords v Walker (1989) …. [1-18], [36-07] Hunt v Silk (1804) …. [38-06], [38-33] Hunt Contracting Co Pty Ltd v Roebuck Resources NL (1992) …. [19-08] Hunter v Walters (1871) …. [21-18] Hunter BNZ Finance Ltd v C G Maloney Pty Ltd (1988) …. [18-41], [18-48] Hunter Engineering v Syncrude Canada (1990) …. [14-18] Huppert v Stock Options of Australia Pty Ltd (1965) …. [35-02] Hurley v McDonald’s Australia Ltd (2000) …. [24-19] Hurst v Bryk [2002] …. [30-36], [37-26] —v Vestcorp Ltd (1988) …. [25-13], [27-03], [27-27], [27-28], [27-37] Huscombe v Standing (1607) …. [22-25] Huskisson RSL Sub-Branch Club Ltd v Sullivan (1990) …. [28-28] Hussey v Eels [1990] …. [35-37] Hutchens v Deauville Investments Pty Ltd (1986) …. [17-09] Hutchinson v McGuren (1910) …. [18-28]
—v Scott (1905) …. [25-21] Hyde v Wrench (1840) …. [3-51] Hyec Electronics Pty Ltd (in liq) v Mead (2003) …. [7-14] Hynes v Byrne (1899) …. [18-37], [18-51] Hyundai Heavy Industries Co Ltd v Papadopoulos [1980] …. [32-02], [36-13], [37-29], [37-33], [38-24] Hyundai Shipbuilding & Heavy Industries Co Ltd v Pournaras [1978] …. [3729] I & L Securities Pty Ltd v HTW Valuers (BNE) Pty Ltd (2000) …. [19-13] IAC (Leasing) Ltd v Humphrey (1972) …. [37-17], [37-40] Iannotti v Corsaro (1984) …. [25-22] ICT Pty Ltd v Sea Containers Ltd (1995) …. [27-38], [27-39] Iezzi Constructions Pty Ltd v Watkins Pacific (Qld) Pty Ltd [1995] …. [38-39] Immer (No 145) Pty Ltd v Uniting Church in Australia Property Trust (NSW) (1993) …. [31-05] Imperial Group Pension Trust Ltd v Imperial Tobacco Ltd [1991] …. [31-17] Imperial Land Co of Marseilles, Re (Harris’ case) (1872) …. [3-35] Imperial Loan Co v Stone [1892] …. [15-37], [15-38] Inche Noriah v Shaik Allie Bin Omar [1929] …. [23-11] Independent Grocers Co-operative Ltd v Noble Lowndes Superannuation Consultants Ltd (1993) …. [34-10], [38-15] Inglis v John Buttery & Co (1878) …. [12-05], [12-11], [12-12] Ingram v Little [1961] …. [20-45], [20-47], [20-48], [20-54] Inn Leisure Industries Pty Ltd v D F McCloy Pty Ltd (1991) …. [18-11], [18-12] Inntrepeneur Pub Co (GL) v East Crown Ltd [2000] …. [10-07], [12-08] Insight Vacations Pty Ltd v Young (2011) …. [14-05] Insurance Co of Africa v Scor (UK) Reinsurance Co Ltd [1985] …. [28-09] Integrated Computer Services Pty Ltd v Digital Equipment Corp (Aust) Pty Ltd
(1988) …. [3-05] Integrated Lighting & Ceilings Pty Ltd v Phillips Electrical Pty Ltd (1969) …. [3-04], [3-20] Interfoto Picture Library Ltd v Stiletto Visual Programmes Ltd [1989] …. [206], [10-17] International Air Transport Association v Ansett Australia Holdings Ltd (2008) …. [12-01] International Leasing Corp (Vic) Ltd v Aiken [1967] …. [30-38], [31-04], [3105], [32-09], [37-16] International Society of Auctioneers and Valuers (Baillie’s case), Re [1898] …. [20-41] Interstar Wholesale Finance Pty Ltd v Integral Home Loans Pty Ltd (2008) …. [37-07] Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society [1998] …. [1-10], [2-23], [2-24], [12-14], [17-09] Inwards v Baker [1965] …. [7-13] IOOF Australia Trustees (NSW) Ltd v Tantipech (1998) …. [19-19], [19-20] IRAF Pty Ltd v Graham [1982] …. [27-39] IRC v Mills [1975] …. [15-07] Isabella Shipowner SA v Shagang Shipping Co Ltd (The Aquafaith) [2012] …. [37-24] Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines v Denby [1987] …. [38-28] Ison v Australian Wheat Board (1967) …. [27-21], [27-25] Issa v Berisha [1981] …. [21-01], [21-04] Ivanochko v Sych (1967) …. [20-29] J & S Holdings Pty Ltd v NRMA Insurance Ltd (1982) …. [22-09], [22-13], [2216], [22-19] Jackson v Horizon Holidays Ltd [1975] …. [16-13] —v Union Marine Insurance Co Ltd (1874) …. [14-02], [31-11], [33-04], [3315], [33-25], [33-27], [33-42], [33-52]
Jacob & Youngs Inc v Kent (1921) …. [28-35] Jacobsen Sons & Co v E Underwood & Son Ltd (1894) …. [3-54] JAD International Pty Ltd v International Trucks Australia Ltd (1994) …. [1862] Jaensch v Coffey (1984) …. [18-31] Jaggard v Sawyer [1995] …. [36-25], [36-26], [38-29] James (A S) Pty Ltd v Duncan [1970] …. [35-32] James Finlay & Co Ltd v NV Kwik Hoo Tong Handel Maatschappij [1929] …. [35-35] James Miller & Partners Ltd v Whitworth Street Estates (Manchester) Ltd [1970] …. [12-12] Janssen Pharmaceutical Pty Ltd v Pfizer Pty Ltd (1986) …. [19-07] Jardin v Metcash Ltd (2011) …. [26-08], [26-16], [40-07] Jarvis v Pitt Ltd (1935) …. [3-23] —v Swans Tours Ltd [1973] …. [36-09] Je Maintiendrai Pty Ltd v Quaglia (1980) …. [7-09], [7-16] Jedda Investments Pty Ltd v Krambousanos (1997) …. [24-19] Jeffries v Fairs (1876) …. [20-12], [20-19], [39-11] Jenkins v Young Brothers Transport Ltd [2006] …. [17-08] Jennings v Radio Station KSCS 96-3 Inc (1986) …. [6-16] —v Rundall (1799) …. [15-24] —v Zilahi-Kiss (1972) …. [14-12], [14-19] Jericho v Guglielmin [1938] …. [39-11] Jireh International Pty Ltd t/as Gloria Jean's Coffee v Western Exports Services Inc [2011] …. [2-24] JLW (Vic) Pty Ltd v Tsiloglou [1994] …. [19-13] Jobson v Johnson [1989] …. [37-11], [37-13], [37-16], [37-40] John Alexander's Clubs Pty Ltd v White City Tennis Club Ltd (2010) …. [11-11]
John Howard & Co (Northern) Ltd v J P Knight Ltd [1969] …. [3-06] John McGrath Motors (Canberra) Pty Ltd v Applebee (1964) …. [18-26] John Wakim & Sons Pty Ltd v BBA Industries Pty Ltd [2000] …. [5-05] Johnson v Agnew [1980] …. [30-04], [31-07], [32-01], [32-04], [35-15], [3625], [36-28], [36-29], [37-37] —v Buttress (1936) …. [23-04], [23-07], [23-09], [23-10], [23-11], [23-12], [2314], [24-07] —v Clark [1908] …. [15-07] —v Gore Wood & Co (A firm) [2001] …. [36-08] Johnson v Perez (1988) …. [35-03], [35-04], [35-14], [35-15], [35-31], [36-24] —v Snaddon [1999] …. [30-36] —v—[2001] …. [30-36] —v Unisys Ltd [2003] …. [35-03] Johnson (E) & Co (Barbados) Ltd v NSR Ltd [1997] …. [33-33], [39-08] Johnson Matthey Ltd v A C Rochester Overseas Corp (1990) …. [12-16] Johnson Tiles Pty Ltd v Esso Australia Ltd (2000) …. [19-10] Johnston v Arnaboldi [1990] …. [21-09] Johnstone v Marks (1887) …. [15-10] Joliffe v Baker (1883) …. [18-25] Jones v Barkley (1781) …. [27-27], [28-08], [30-47] —v Bouffier (1911) …. [27-12] —v Clifford (1876) …. [20-28], [39-11] —v Daniel [1894] …. [3-22] —v Dumbrell [1981] …. [18-17] —v Padavatton [1969] …. [1-09], [4-09], [8-03] —v Sherwood Computer Services Plc [1992] …. [25-26] Jones (A A) & Son Pty Ltd v Weeden (1964) …. [38-34] Jorden v Money (1854) …. [7-18]
Joscelyne v Nissen [1970] …. [21-11] Joseph Constantine SS Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting Corp Ltd [1942] …. [3303], [33-22], [33-44], [33-46], [33-51], [33-55], [33-56], [34-03], [34-06] Kaines (UK) Ltd v Osterreichische Warrenhandelsgesellschaft Austrowaren Gesellschaft mbH [1993] …. [35-35], [36-05] Kalnenas v Kovacevich [1961] …. [9-14], [9-22] Kamil Export (Aust) Pty Ltd v NPL (Australia) Pty Ltd (1993) …. [14-09] Kammins Ballrooms Co Ltd v Zenith Investments (Torquay) Ltd [1971] …. [728], [18-48], [31-06] Karaguleski v Vasil Bros & Co Pty Ltd [1981] …. [3-48] Karsales (Harrow) Ltd v Wallis [1956] …. [14-07] Kathopoulos v Bjelica Investments Pty Ltd (1979) …. [37-37] Kaufman v Gerson [1904] …. [22-10], [22-19] —v McGillicuddy (1914) …. [32-10] Kawasaki Steel Corp v Sardoil SpA (The Zuiho Maru) [1977] …. [33-51] Keane v Boycott (1795) …. [15-08] Kearley v Thomson (1890) …. [27-07], [27-12], [27-16], [27-18], [27-20] Keen Mar Corp Pty Ltd v Labrador Park Shopping Centre Pty Ltd (1989) …. [19-20] Kell v Harris (1915) …. [15-08] Kelly v Caledonian Coal Co (1898) …. [3-09], [3-23] Kelner v Baxter (1866) …. [15-53] Kennedy v Brown (1863) …. [6-31] —v Panama New Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Co Ltd (1867) …. [18-23], [18-44], [18-61], [20-06] Kenneth Wright Distributors Pty Ltd, Re; W J Vine Pty Ltd v Hall [1973] …. [25-29] Kenny & Good Pty Ltd v MGICA (1992) Ltd (1999) …. [18-69], [19-14], [3520]
Kenyon Son & Craven Ltd v Baxter Hoare & Co Ltd [1971] …. [14-09] Kerr v Morris [1987] …. [26-18] Kerridge v Simmonds (1906) …. [25-28] Kershaw v Forster Pastoral Pty Ltd (1985) …. [28-15] Kesarmal S/O Letchman Das v NKV Valliappa Chettiar S/O Nagappa Chettiar [1954] …. [22-24] Kettlewell v Refuge Assurance Co [1908] …. [18-09], [18-28] Khaled v Athanas Bros (Aden) Ltd (1967) …. [3-51], [3-52], [3-55] Khoury v Government Insurance Office of New South Wales (1984) …. [11-05], [11-13], [18-15], [31-05] —v Khouri (2006) …. [9-09] Kilmer v British Columbia Orchard Lands Ltd [1913] …. [37-40] King v Ivanhoe Gold Corp Ltd (1908) …. [4-04] —v Michael Faraday and Partners Ltd [1939] …. [17-12] —v Poggioli (1923) …. [36-25], [39-07] King v Smith [1900] …. [21-18] King (as trustees of the Travel Compensation Fund) v Yurisich (2006) …. [1707] King’s Motors (Oxford) Ltd v Lax [1970] …. [4-10] King’s Norton Metal Co Ltd v Edridge Merrett & Co Ltd (1897) …. [20-43], [20-46], [20-48] Kingston v Preston (1773) …. [28-08] Kirby v Registrar of Titles [1999] …. [15-55] Kiriri Cotton Co Ltd v Dewani [1960] …. [27-20], [27-28] Kirkham v Chief Constable of the Greater Manchester Police [1990] …. [27-02] Kitchen (J) & Sons Pty Ltd v Stewart’s Cash & Carry Stores (1942) …. [3-23] Kleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council [1999] …. [38-18] —v Malaysia Mining Corp Berhad [1989] …. [8-05], [13-01]
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Longmate v Ledger (1860) …. [24-07] Longridge v Dorville (1821) …. [6-06] Lonsdale Sand and Metal Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1998) …. [17-14] Lord Elphinstone v Monkland Iron and Coal Co Ltd (1886) …. [37-14] Lord Strathcona Steamship Co Ltd v Dominion Coal Co Ltd [1926] …. [16-14] Loughridge v Lavery [1969] …. [31-02] Louinder v Leis (1982) …. [29-12], [30-55], [30-60], [30-62], [30-64] Louth v Diprose (1992) …. [1-18], [23-01], [23-04], [23-09], [23-16], [24-10], [24-14] Lovell & Christmas v Beauchamp [1894] …. [15-17] Lowe v Hope [1970] …. [37-37] Lowe Lippmann Figdor (R) & Franck v AGC (Advances) Ltd [1992] …. [18-34] Lu v Lim (1993) …. [26-17] Lucas & Tait (Investments) Pty Ltd v Victoria Securities Ltd [1973] …. [38-34] Lucy v Commonwealth (1923) …. [35-34], [37-33], [40-08] Lukacs v Wood (1978) …. [20-30] Lumbers v W Cook Builders Pty Ltd (in liq) (2008) …. [1-18], [38-03], [38-09], [38-11] Lumley v Ravenscroft [1895] …. [15-08] —v Wagner (1852) …. [40-08] Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd (1938) …. [13-03], [1304], [28-13], [30-11], [30-15], [30-16], [30-39], [30-41], [31-06], [35-02], [35-05], [35-06], [37-18], [37-21] Luxor (Eastbourne) Ltd v Cooper [1941] …. [3-50], [11-02], [11-09], [11-13], [28-09] Lyon v Magnet Nominees Pty Ltd [1978] …. [37-37] M & M Civil Engineering Pty Ltd v Sunshine Coast Turf Club [1987] …. [1556]
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Mahoney v Lindsay (1980) …. [30-47] Maiden v Maiden (1909) …. [9-21] Mailman (G R) & Associates Pty Ltd v Wormald (Aust) Pty Ltd (1991) …. [2912] Mainprice v Westley (1865) …. [3-11] Majeau Carrying Co Pty Ltd v Coastal Rutile Ltd (1973) …. [11-25] Majik Markets Pty Ltd v S & M Motor Repairs Pty Ltd (No 1) (1987) …. [3118] Major v Bretherton (1928) …. [12-08] Malhotra v Choudhury [1980] …. [36-28] Malik v Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA [1998] …. [35-03], [3523] Mallick v Parish (1916) …. [35-10] Mallinson v Scottish Australian Investment Co Ltd (1920) …. [12-22], [28-28] Malmesbury (Earl) v Malmesbury (Countess) (1862) …. [21-01] Malthouse v Adelaide Milk Supply Co-operative Ltd [1922] …. [3-05] Manchester Diocesan Council v Commercial & General Investments Ltd [1970] …. [3-28], [3-55] Mann v Capital Territory Health Commission (1982) …. [35-16] Mannai Investments Co Pty Ltd v Eagle Star Life Assurance Co Ltd [1997] …. [2-23], [31-04] Mantovani v Carapelli SpA [1980] …. [25-26] Maple Flock Co Ltd v Universal Furniture Products (Wembley) Ltd [1934] …. [30-38] Maralinga Pty Ltd v Major Enterprises Pty Ltd (1973) …. [21-04], [21-05], [2106], [21-07], [21-08] Marbe v George Edwardes (Daly’s Theatre) Ltd [1928] …. [36-10] March v E & M H Stramare Pty Ltd (1991) …. [35-20], [35-22] Mardorf Peach & Co Ltd v Attica Sea Carriers Corp of Liberia [1977] …. [3011], [31-18]
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Matthes v Carter (1955) …. [9-20] Matthews v Baxter (1873) …. [15-39] —v Smallwood [1910] …. [12-18], [31-06] Matthey v Curling [1922] …. [33-03], [33-36], [33-37] Max Garrett (Distributors) Pty Ltd v Tobias (1975) …. [29-17] Maxitherm Boilers Pty Ltd v Pacific Dunlop Ltd [1998] …. [10-17] May v Platt [1900] …. [21-11] May & Butcher Ltd v R (1929) …. [4-10], [4-11], [11-16], [38-18] Maybury v Atlantic Union Oil Co Ltd (1953) …. [10-13] Mayers & Co v Johnson & Co [1905] …. [3-27] Mayfair Trading Co Pty Ltd v Dreyer (1958) …. [27-20] Maynard v Goode (1926) …. [12-12], [28-11] Mayson v Clouet [1924] …. [38-24] MBP (SA) Pty Ltd v Gogic (1991) …. [36-23] McBride v Sandland (1918) …. [9-21], [9-22] McCarthy Bros (Milk Vendors) Pty Ltd v Dairy Farmers’ Co-operative Milk Co Ltd (1945) …. [25-22], [25-23] McClay v Seeligson (1904) …. [3-21] McCutcheon v David MacBrayne Ltd [1964] …. [10-17], [10-18] McDermott v Black (1940) …. [6-50], [6-54] McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) …. [28-08], [31-16], [32-01], [32-02], [32-04], [32-05], [32-07], [34-09], [36-13], [37-28], [37-29], [37-35], [3737], [37-38], [37-40], [38-24], [38-32], [38-36] McDonald (A H) & Co Pty Ltd v Wells (1931) …. [18-43] McDougall v Aeromarine of Emsworth Ltd [1958] …. [30-53], [38-06] McEntire v Crossley Bros Ltd [1895] …. [37-38] McEvoy v Belfast Banking Co [1935] …. [16-31] McFarlane v Daniell (1938) …. [27-02], [27-29], [27-30], [27-31], [27-37]
McGregor v McGregor (1888) …. [8-04] McGruther v Pitcher [1904] …. [16-14] McHale v Watson (1966) …. [15-07] McIntyre v Gye (1994) …. [17-07] —v Swyny (1893) …. [18-10] McKenna v Perecich [1973] …. [27-21] —v Richey [1950] …. [36-29] McLarnon v McLarnon (1968) …. [22-08] McLaughlin v Daily Telegraph Newspaper Co Ltd (No 2) (1904) …. [15-40] —v Darcy (1918) …. [15-11] —v Freehill (1908) …. [15-44] McMahon v Ambrose [1987] …. [9-21], [9-22], [9-24], [36-25], [39-01], [3903], [39-08] —v Gilberd & Co Ltd [1955] …. [3-16] —v Sydney County Council (1940) …. [33-33] McNally v Waitzer [1981] …. [30-62] McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission (1951) …. [14-06], [20-12], [20-13], [20-17], [20-20], [20-24], [28-01], [29-13], [29-15], [35-11], [3518], [35-27], [36-19] McTier v Haupt [1992] …. [13-01] McWilliams’ Wines Pty Ltd v L S Booth Wine Transport Pty Ltd (1992) …. [1909] Mears v Safecar Security Ltd [1983] …. [12-19] Measures Bros Ltd v Measures [1910] …. [40-04] Medlin v State Government Insurance Commission (1995) …. [35-22] Meehan v Jones (1982) …. [1-18], [5-07], [5-08], [13-18], [31-01] Mehmet v Benson (1965) …. [39-07] Melachrino v Nickoll [1920] …. [36-04], [36-05]
Melverton v Commonwealth Development Bank of Australia (1989) …. [24-27] Mendelson-Zeller Co Inc v T & C Providores Pty Ltd [1981] …. [3-38] Mendelssohn v Normand Ltd [1970] …. [10-18], [14-14], [14-19] Meng Leong Development Pte Ltd v Jip Hong Trading Co Pte Ltd [1985] …. [31-06] Menhaden Pty Ltd v Citibank NA (1984) …. [19-04], [19-11] Menzies v Williams (1893) …. [3-27] Mercantile Credit Co Ltd v Hamblin [1965] …. [21-17] Mercantile Credit Ltd v Spinks [1968] …. [15-14] Mercantile Credits Ltd v Harry [1969] …. [4-08] Mercantile Union Guarantee Corp Ltd v Ball [1937] …. [15-13] Meredith v Anthony [1980] …. [5-04] Meriton Apartments Pty Ltd v McLaurin & Tait (Developments) Pty Ltd (1976) …. [33-33] Merritt v Merritt [1970] …. [8-03] Mersey Steel and Iron Co Ltd v Naylor Benzon & Co (1884) …. [28-25], [3037], [30-38], [30-41], [37-30] Metal Fabrications (Vic) Pty Ltd v Kelcey [1986] …. [35-33], [35-35] Metcalf v Permanent Building Society (1993) …. [25-11] Metropolitan Electric Supply Co Ltd v Ginder [1901] …. [6-40] Metropolitan Health Service Board v Australian Nursing Federation (2000) …. [28-28] Metropolitan Knitting and Hosiery Co Ltd v Thomas Burnley & Sons Ltd (1924) …. [9-11], [9-17] Metropolitan Milk Supply (Greater Brisbane) Ltd v Paulsen [1933] …. [3-43] Metropolitan Transit Authority v Waverley Transit Pty Ltd [1991] …. [7-14] Metropolitan Water Board v Dick Kerr & Co Ltd [1917] …. [33-02], [33-04], [33-24], [33-29], [33-39], [33-40], [34-08] Meudell v Mayer etc of Bendigo (1900) …. [3-12]
Meynell v Surtees (1855) …. [3-55] Micarone v Perpetual Trustees Australia Ltd (1999) …. [24-10] Michael v Hart & Co [1902] …. [30-30] Michael Realty Pty Ltd v Carr [1977] …. [30-56] Midland Bank Trust Co Ltd v Hett Stubbs & Kemp [1979] …. [18-36] Mikaelion v Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (1999) …. [19-10] Milchas Investments Pty Ltd v Larkin (1989) …. [19-16] Miles v New Zealand Alford Estate Co (1886) …. [6-50], [6-52], [6-53] —v Wakefield MDC [1987] …. [28-32], [38-25] Miliangos v George Frank (Textiles) Ltd [1976] …. [35-15] Millars’ Karri and Jarrah Co (1902) v Weddel Turner & Co (1908) …. [30-38], [30-44] Miller v Fiona’s Clothes Horse of Centrepoint Pty Ltd (1989) …. [19-19] —v Miller (2011) …. [18-30], [25-05], [27-05] Miller & Associates Insurance Broking Pty Ltd v BMW Australia Finance Ltd (2010) …. [19-05], [19-10] Millet v Van Heck & Co [1920] …. [36-04] Millett v Regent [1975] …. [9-21], [9-23] Millichamp v Jones [1982] …. [37-37] Milliner v Milliner (1908) …. [8-04] Mills v Fox (1887) …. [20-28] —v Stokman (1967) …. [9-11] Milne v A-G (Tas) (1956) …. [3-07], [8-09] —v Municipal Council of Sydney (1912) …. [3-23] Minister for Consumer Affairs v W W Vallack Real Estate Pty Ltd (1986) …. [24-21] Minister for Education v Oxwell [1966] …. [15-11], [15-25], [25-33]
Minister for Lands and Forests v McPherson (1991) …. [31-13] Minister of State for the Army v Dalziel (1944) …. [33-36] Miramar Maritime Corp v Holborn Oil Trading Ltd [1984] …. [10-19] Misner v Australian Capital Territory (2000) …. [17-02] Mobil Oil Australia Ltd v Lyndel Nominees Pty Ltd (1998) …. [3-50] Mohamed v Alaga & Co (a firm) [2000] …. [27-28] Moir v J P Porter & Co Ltd (1979) …. [8-11] Molton v Camroux (1848) …. [15-36], [15-38] —v—(1849) …. [15-36], [15-37], [15-38] Molyneux v Natal Land and Colonization Co Ltd [1905] …. [15-44] Monarch SS Co Ltd v A/B Karlshamns Oljefabriker [1949] …. [33-47], [35-04], [35-20], [35-21], [35-22], [35-24] Mondel v Steel (1841) …. [28-32], [37-02] Money v Money (No 2) [1966] …. [25-33], [27-19] Moneywood Pty Ltd v Salamon Nominees Pty Ltd (2001) …. [11-09] Monroe Schneider Associates (Inc) v No 1 Raberem Pty Ltd (1991) …. [18-68] Mooney v Williams (1905) …. [3-22] Moorcock (The) (1889) …. [11-08] Moorhouse v Angus and Robertson (No 1) Pty Ltd [1981] …. [11-11] More OG Romsdal Fylkesbata AS v Demise Chaterers of the Ship ‘Jotunheim’ [2005] …. [31-18] Morgan v Thorne (1841) …. [15-07] Morgan Crucible Co Plc v Hill Samuel & Co Ltd [1991] …. [18-34] Moriarty v Regent’s Garage and Engineering Co Ltd [1921] …. [28-27] Morlend Finance Corp (Vic) Pty Ltd v Westendorp [1993] …. [18-20], [24-24], [24-27] Morley v Richardson (1942) …. [25-16] Morris, Re (1943) …. [25-27]
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Myam Pty Ltd v Teskera [1971] …. [4-04] Myers (G H) & Co v Brent Cross Service Co [1934] …. [11-14] MYT Engineering Pty Ltd v Mulcon Pty Ltd (1999) …. [15-51] Myton Ltd v Schwab-Morris [1974] …. [37-37] Nagle v Feilden [1966] …. [26-03] Nagy v Masters Dairy Ltd (1996) …. [19-10] Nangus Pty Ltd v Charles Donovan Pty Ltd [1989] …. [36-15], [37-29] Narain v Euroasia (Pacific) Pty Ltd (2009) …. [23-05] Nash v Inman [1908] …. [15-10], [15-15] National Australia Bank Ltd v KDS Construction Services Pty Ltd (1987) …. [13-18], [28-16] —v Nemur Varity Pty Ltd (2002) …. [35-24] —v Nobile (1988) …. [18-09] —v Starbronze Pty Ltd [2001] …. [24-14] National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] …. [33-03], [33-04], [33-05], [33-09], [33-26], [33-34], [33-35], [33-36], [33-37], [33-49], [3351], [33-52], [33-54], [33-56] National Mutual Holdings Pty Ltd v Sentry Corp (1989) …. [25-16] National Mutual Property Services (Australia) Pty Ltd v Citibank Savings Ltd (1995) …. [17-12] National Phonograph Co of Australia v Menck (1908) …. [16-14] —v—(1911) …. [16-14] National Provincial Bank of England v Jackson (1886) …. [21-18] National Savings Bank Association, Re (Hebb’s case) (1867) …. [3-26], [3-43] National Westminster Bank Plc v Morgan [1985] …. [23-04], [23-12], [24-09], [24-10], [24-12] —v Somer International (UK) Ltd [2002] …. [7-06] Naxakis v Western General Hospital (1999) …. [29-17]
Neal v Ayers (1940) …. [18-68], [25-23] Neat Holdings Pty Ltd v Karajan Holdings Pty Ltd (1992) …. [18-28] Neeta (Epping) Pty Ltd v Phillips (1974) …. [30-55], [30-60], [30-62], [30-64] Neill v Hewens (1953) …. [9-14] Nelson v Kimberley Homes Pty Ltd (1988) …. [34-04] —v Nelson (1995) …. [25-05], [25-07], [25-15], [27-02], [27-03], [27-10], [2719], [27-21] Nemeth v Bayswater Road Pty Ltd [1988] …. [10-10], [12-07], [12-08] Nemtsas v Nemtsas [1957] …. [21-19] Netaff Pty Ltd v Bikane Pty Ltd (1990) …. [19-14] Neville v London ‘Express’ Newspaper Ltd [1919] …. [25-29] New South Wales v Bardolph (1934) …. [15-59], [15-60], [15-61] New Zealand Loan and Mercantile Agency Co v Howes (1888) …. [18-37], [1854], [18-55] New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v A M Satterthwaite & Co Ltd (The Eurymedon) [1975] …. [3-08], [6-49], [6-64], [16-26], [16-27] —v Société des Ateliers et Chantiers de France [1919] …. [31-01] Newbigging v Adam (1886) …. [18-65] Newbon v City Mutual Life Assurance Society Ltd (1935) …. [28-40], [31-01], [31-09], [32-03] Newborne v Sensolid (Great Britain) Ltd [1953] …. [15-53] Newcastle District Fishermen’s Co-Operative Society v Neal (1950) …. [27-21], [27-23] Newcombe v Newcombe (1934) …. [28-05] Newmont Pty Ltd v Laverton Nickel NL (1982) …. [28-09] Newry & Enniskillen Ry Co v Coombe (1849) …. [15-19] News Ltd v Australian Rugby Football League Ltd (1996) …. [19-17] Newton v Brownett (1940) …. [27-28] —v State Government Insurance Office (Qld) [1986] …. [6-55]
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Ramsden v Dyson (1866) …. [7-13] Rance v Kensett (1916) …. [18-23] Rann v Hughes (1778) …. [6-06] Ratto v Trifid Pty Ltd [1987] …. [9-22] Rawlins v Wickham (1858) …. [18-48] Rawson v Hobbs (1961) …. [30-09], [30-43], [31-03], [31-16], [38-36] Ray v Davies (1909) …. [11-05], [39-07] —v Druce [1985] …. [36-21] Read v Anderson (1882) …. [25-16] —v—(1884) …. [25-16] —v Nerey Nominees Pty Ltd [1979] …. [35-31] Real Estate Securities Ltd v Kew Golf Links Estate Pty Ltd [1935] …. [37-40] Reardon v Morley Ford Pty Ltd (1980) …. [3-14], [3-15] Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar Hansen-Tangen [1976] …. [1-06], [11-19], [12-03], [12-13], [12-14], [12-15], [13-13], [30-19] Redgrave v Hurd (1881) …. [18-22], [18-37] Reed v Kilburn Co-operative Society (1875) …. [28-17] —v Sheehan (1982) …. [7-09] Reese Bros Plastics Ltd v Hamon-Sobelco Australia Pty Ltd (1988) …. [3-38] Reese River Silver Mining Co Ltd v Smith (1869) …. [18-37], [18-45], [18-47] Reeves v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis [2000] …. [35-22] Reg Glass Pty Ltd v Rivers Locking Systems Pty Ltd (1968) …. [11-14], [2915], [35-20] Regalian Properties Plc v London Docklands Development Corp [1995] …. [3817] Regent v Millett (1976) …. [9-21], [9-22], [9-23] Reid v Rush and Tompkins Group Plc [1990] …. [11-02] Reigate v Union Manufacturing Co (Ramsbottom) Ltd [1918] …. [36-17]
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Sweet & Maxwell Ltd v Universal News Services Ltd [1964] …. [4-10] Sybron Corp v Rochem Ltd [1984] …. [18-18] Sydney City Council v Ilenace Pty Ltd [1984] …. [27-30] Sydney Corp v West (1965) …. [14-03], [14-07], [14-15] Sykes (F & G) (Wessex) Ltd v Fine Fare Ltd [1967] …. [4-12] Sykes v Stratton [1972] …. [27-14], [27-18] Symes v Hughes (1870) …. [27-15] Synge v Synge [1894] …. [30-42], [30-66], [36-17] Syros Shipping Co SA v Elaghill Trading Co (The Proodos C) [1981] …. [6-45], [6-51], [7-11], [22-04] Sze Hai Tong Bank Ltd v Rambler Cycle Co Ltd [1959] …. [14-09] Szep v Blanken [1969] …. [18-48] Tabcorp Holdings Ltd v Bowen Investments Pty Ltd (2009) …. [1-18], [36-11], [36-12], [38-29] Tabet v Gett (2010) …. [36-20] Taco Co of Australia Inc v Taco Bell Pty Ltd (1982) …. [19-05] Tai Hing Cotton Mill Ltd v Liu Chong Hing Bank Ltd [1986] …. [11-05], [1116], [36-04] Talk of the Town Pty Ltd v Hagstrom (1990) …. [26-16] Tallerman & Co Pty Ltd v Nathan’s Merchandise (Victoria) Pty Ltd (1957) …. [3-31], [3-32], [3-36], [9-25], [9-26] Tame v New South Wales (2002) …. [18-30] Tamplin v James (1880) …. [20-51], [39-11] Tamplin (FA) SS Co Ltd v Anglo-Mexican Petroleum Products Co Ltd [1916] …. [33-08], [33-13], [33-51], [33-52], [33-56] Tankexpress A/S v Compagnie Financière Belge des Petroles SA (The Petrofina) [1949] …. [28-39] Tanwar Enterprises Pty Ltd v Cauchi (2003) …. [1-18], [1-19], [31-13], [39-04]
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Watts Watts & Co Ltd v Mitsui & Co Ltd [1917] …. [33-26], [34-07] Waugh v Morris (1873) …. [25-21], [25-22] Way v Latilla [1937] …. [6-31], [38-37] Weatherby v Banham (1832) …. [3-29] Webb Distributors (Aust) Pty Ltd v State of Victoria (1993) …. [1-18], [18-43], [19-17], [24-18] Webster, Re (1975) …. [3-09], [3-23] Wehr v Thom [1969] …. [18-71] Welbourne v Australian Postal Commission (1983) …. [28-39] Welby v Drake (1825) …. [6-59] Wells v Birtchnell (1893) …. [3-07] Wells (Merstham) Ltd v Buckland Sand and Silica Ltd [1965] …. [10-14] Welston v North Cornwall District Council [1997] …. [18-30] Wendt v Bruce (1931) …. [30-61], [31-05] Wenham v Ella (1972) …. [35-04], [35-10], [35-13], [35-14], [35-24], [36-07], [36-29] Wenkheim v Arndt (1873) …. [3-37] Wenning v Robinson [1964–65] …. [4-11] Wentworth v Woollahra Municipal Council (1982) …. [36-25] Wertheim v Chicoutimi Pulp Co [1911] …. [35-41] West v AGC (Advances) Ltd (1986) …. [24-19], [24-21], [24-27] West London Commercial Bank Ltd v Kitson (1884) …. [18-10], [18-11], [1812] West Midlands Co-operative Society Ltd v Tipton [1986] …. [31-03] Westco Motors Distributors Pty Ltd v Palmer [1979] …. [26-21] Western Australian Insurance Co Ltd v Dayton (1924) …. [31-08] Western Electric Co (Australia) Ltd v Ward (1933) …. [37-08] Western Export Services Inc v Jireh International Pty Ltd (2011) …. [2-42], [12-
13], [19-17] Westfield Holdings Ltd v ACT Television Pty Ltd (1992) …. [4-14] Westmelton (Vic) Pty Ltd v Archer and Shulman [1982] …. [23-08], [23-09], [23-11] Westminster Estates Pty Ltd v Calleja [1970] …. [3-16], [3-48] Weston v Beaufils (1994) …. [27-14] Westpac Banking Corp v Dawson (1990) …. [6-12] —v Paterson (2001) …. [23-05] —v Robinson (1993) …. [18-15] Westralian Farmers Ltd v Commonwealth Agricultural Service Engineers Ltd (1936) …. [28-21], [31-01], [34-09], [34-11], [37-26], [37-31] Westwood v Secretary of State for Employment [1985] …. [35-34] Wharton v McKenzie (1844) …. [15-10] Wheeler v Atkinson (1925) …. [18-55] —v Sargeant (1893) …. [23-08] Whim Well Copper Mines Ltd v Pratt (1910) …. [33-15] Whincup v Hughes (1871) …. [34-11], [38-06] White v Australian and New Zealand Theatres Ltd (1943) …. [12-17] —v Bluett (1853) …. [6-39] —v John Warwick & Co Ltd [1953] …. [14-17] —v Jones [1995] …. [16-23] White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor [1962] …. [2-10], [30-30], [3040], [31-02], [31-17], [35-37], [37-20], [37-21], [37-23], [37-24] White Cliffs Opal Mines Ltd v Miller (1904) …. [3-54] White Rose Flour Milling Co Pty Ltd v Australian Wheat Board (1944) …. [2216], [22-18] White Trucks Pty Ltd v Riley (1948) …. [3-20], [3-28], [3-29], [3-49], [30-40] Whitehead, In the Estate of (1986) …. [6-60]
Whitelaw v Delaney [1914] …. [20-28] Whitfeld v De Lauret & Co Ltd (1920) …. [35-03] Whitlock v Brew (1968) …. [4-04], [4-15] Whittet v State Bank of New South Wales (1991) …. [12-16] Whittingham v Murdy (1889) …. [15-16], [15-17] Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd v L Schuler AG [1972] …. [13-07] Wigan v Edwards (1973) …. [6-41], [6-50], [6-53], [30-66] —v English & Scottish Law Life Assurance Association [1909] …. [6-15] Wight v Foran (1987) …. [30-33] —v Haberdan Pty Ltd [1984] …. [39-06] Wilcher v Steain (1961) …. [18-20], [18-22], [18-37] Wild v Simpson [1912] …. [27-06], [27-28] Wilde v Gibson (1848) …. [18-54] Wilding v Sanderson [1897] …. [20-09] Wilkie v London Passenger Transport Board [1947] …. [3-08] Wilkinson v Clements (1872) …. [39-03] —v Coverdale (1793) …. [6-03] Wilkinson v Detmold (1890) …. [18-22] —v Osborne (1915) …. [25-19], [25-20], [25-24] William Brandt’s Sons & Co v Dunlop Rubber Co [1905] …. [17-07] William Cory & Son Ltd v London Corporation [1951] …. [2-17] William Sindall Plc v Cambridgeshire County Council [1994] …. [18-77], [2010], [20-24], [20-29], [20-30], [33-55], [36-25] William Thomas & Sons v Harrowing SS Co [1915] …. [28-23], [28-32] William Tibbits & Co v Holt (1890) …. [18-61] Williams v Bulat [1992] …. [20-42] —v Carwardine (1833) …. [3-08], [3-40]
—v Frayne (1937) …. [17-11] —v Johnson [1937] …. [23-08] —v Moor (1843) …. [15-18] —v Moore [1963] …. [18-64] —v Roffey Bros & Nicholls (Contractors) Ltd [1991] …. [6-17], [6-48], [22-14] —v The Commonwealth (2012) …. [15-59] —v Williams (1853) …. [3-55] —v—[1957] …. [6-42] Williamson v Diab [1988] …. [27-28] —v Murdoch (1912) …. [28-31] Williamson (J C) Ltd v Lukey (1931) …. [9-21], [9-22], [9-23], [9-24], [36-25], [39-01], [39-03], [39-08], [40-01], [40-05], [40-07] Wilsher v Essex Area Health Authority [1988] …. [35-20] Wilson v Belfast Corp (1921) …. [3-17], [3-26] —v Brisbane City Council [1931] …. [18-23], [18-38] —v Darling Island Stevedoring & Lighterage Co Ltd (1956) …. [16-01], [1605], [16-07], [16-20], [16-24] —v Kingsgate Mining Industries Pty Ltd [1973] …. [7-26], [7-28] —v Maynard Shipbuilding Consultants AB [1978] …. [12-19] —v Union Trustee Co (1923) …. [18-38] —v Winton [1969] …. [3-25] Wilton v Farnworth (1948) …. [24-07] Wiluszynski v Tower Hamlets London BC [1989] …. [28-32] Wings Ltd v Ellis [1985] …. [36-09] Winks v W H Heck & Sons Pty Ltd [1986] …. [21-06] Winterton Constructions Pty Ltd v Hambros Australia Ltd (1991) …. [38-26] —v— (1992) …. [30-43] With v O’Flanagan [1936] …. [18-17]
WMC Resources Ltd v Leighton Contractors Pty Ltd (1999) …. [4-10] Woden Squash Courts Pty Ltd v Zero Builders Pty Ltd [1976] …. [9-15] Wollondilly Shire Council v Picton Power Lines Pty Ltd (1994) …. [37-16] Wong Lai Ying v Chinachem Investment Co Ltd (1979) …. [33-33], [33-40] Wood v Little (1921) …. [25-24] Wood Factory Pty Ltd v Kiritos Pty Ltd (1985) …. [30-36], [31-04] Woodar Investment Development Ltd v Wimpey Construction UK Ltd [1980] …. [16-13], [30-33], [30-41], [30-47] Woodhouse AC Israel Cocoa Ltd SA v Nigerian Produce Marketing Co Ltd [1972] …. [7-08] Woodside Offshore Petroleum Pty Ltd v Attwood Oceanics Inc [1986] …. [5-09] Woolcock Street Investments Pty Ltd v CDG Pty Ltd (2004) …. [18-30] Woolf v Associated Finance Pty Ltd [1956] …. [15-23] Woolf v Collis Removal Service [1948] …. [32-09] Woolworths Ltd v Kelly (1991) …. [6-02], [6-07], [6-23], [6-48], [6-51] Workers Trust & Merchant Bank Ltd v Dojap Investments Ltd [1993] …. [3833] Workman Clark & Co Ltd v Brazileno [1908] …. [37-06] Wright v Carter [1903] …. [23-05] —v Dean [1948] …. [30-65] —v Gasweld Pty Ltd (1991) …. [27-38], [27-39] —v Madden [1992] …. [10-11] —v TNT Management Pty Ltd (1989) …. [11-06], [11-14], [19-05], [19-09] Wroth v Tyler [1974] …. [36-21], [36-28] WWF — World Wide Fund for Nature v World Wrestling Federation Entertainment Inc [2008] …. [38-29] WX Investments Ltd v Begg [2002] …. [3-34] Wyatt v Ball [1955] …. [6-08]
—v Kreglinger [1933] …. [6-24], [26-01], [26-06] Wylie v ANI Corp Ltd [2002] …. [35-04] Yango Pastoral Co Pty Ltd v First Chicago Australia Ltd (1978) …. [25-04], [2507], [25-09], [25-13], [25-14], [25-15] Yardley v Saunders [1982] …. [37-39], [38-33] Yaroomba Beach Development Co Pty Ltd v Coeur de Lion Investments Pty Ltd (1989) …. [12-21], [25-22] Yeoman Credit Ltd v Apps [1962] …. [14-10], [14-12] —v Latter [1961] …. [9-07] —v Waragowski [1961] …. [36-15] Yerkey v Jones (1939) …. [23-05], [23-08], [24-07], [24-14] York Air Conditioning & Refrigeration (A’sia) Pty Ltd v Commonwealth (1949) …. [4-12] York Glass Co Ltd v Jubb (1925) …. [15-40] Yorke v Lucas (1985) …. [19-15] Yorkshire Insurance Co Ltd v Craine [1922] …. [7-18], [7-27], [7-28], [31-06], [31-10] Young v Queensland Trustees Ltd (1956) …. [37-01] Young & Marten Ltd v McManus Childs Ltd [1969] …. [9-11], [11-14] Ypatia Halcoussi (The) [1985] …. [21-10] Zamperoni Decorators Pty Ltd v Lo Presti [1983] …. [28-31] Zea Star Shipping Co SA v Parley Augustsson (Invest) A/S [1984] …. [37-02] Zhu v Treasurer of NSW (2004) …. [12-04] Zouch d Abbot & Hallet v Parsons (1765) …. [15-08] Zsadony v Pizer [1955] …. [38-34] Zucker v Straightlace Pty Ltd (1986) …. [3-44], [31-04], [31-05]
Table of Statutes References are to paragraph numbers
NATIONAL LAWS SCHEMES Consumer Law …. [1-21], [1-22], [2-29], [18-03], [19-02], [30-04], [38-04] s 2(1) …. [9-11], [11-27], [11-28], [11-31], [19-01], [19-15], [24-17], [24-29] s 3 …. [11-27] s 3(2) …. [11-27] s 3(10) …. [11-27] s 3(11) …. [11-32] s 4 …. [19-08], [24-17] s 4(1) …. [19-08] s 4(2) …. [19-08] s 4(3)(b) …. [19-08] s 18 …. [1-22], [2-15], [14-19], [19-02], [19-04], [19-05], [19-06], [19-07], [19-08], [19-10], [19-11], [19-13], [19-14], [19-15], [19-16], [19-18], [19-19], [19-20], [36-20] s 20 …. [24-15], [24-16] s 20(1) …. [24-16] s 21 …. [24-15], [24-16], [24-17], [24-19] s 21(2) …. [24-17] s 21(2)(b) …. [22-22] s 21(3)(a) …. [24-17] s 21(3)(b) …. [24-17] s 21(4) …. [24-17]
s 21(4)(b) …. [24-17] s 21(4)(c) …. [24-17] s 22 …. [24-15], [24-16], [24-17], [24-19] s 22(1) …. [24-17] s 22(2) …. [24-17] s 22A …. [24-17] s 23 …. [24-29] s 23(1) …. [24-31] s 23(2) …. [24-31] s 24(1) …. [24-29] s 24(1)(b) …. [24-29] s 24(2) …. [24-29] s 24(3) …. [24-29] s 24(4) …. [24-29] s 25(1) …. [24-30] s 26(1) …. [24-29] s 26(2) …. [24-29] s 27 …. [24-29] s 28 …. [24-29] s 29(1)(m) …. [19-19] s 35 …. [3-15] s 40 …. [3-29] s 48 …. [16-14] s 50 …. [22-30], [26-23] s 50(1) …. [22-30] s 51 …. [11-29] s 52 …. [11-29]
s 53 …. [11-29] s 54 …. [11-29], [11-30] s 54(2) …. [11-30] s 54(3) …. [11-30] s 55 …. [11-29] s 56 …. [11-29] s 57 …. [11-29] s 58 …. [11-34] s 58(1) …. [11-29] s 59 …. [11-29], [11-31] s 59(1) …. [11-34] s 60 …. [11-32], [11-34] s 61(1) …. [11-32] s 61(2) …. [11-32] s 62 …. [11-32] s 63 …. [11-27] s 64 …. [14-22], [14-23], [14-24], [14-25] s 64(2) …. [14-23] s 64A …. [14-22], [14-24], [14-25] s 64A(1) …. [14-24] s 64A(3) …. [14-24] s 64A(4) …. [14-24] s 65 …. [11-27] s 151(1)(m) …. [19-19] s 232 …. [19-12], [24-18] s 232(3) …. [24-31] s 236 …. [19-13], [19-14], [19-15], [19-16], [19-17], [24-18]
s 236(1) …. [19-13] s 236(2) …. [19-14] s 237 …. [19-16], [19-17], [24-18] s 237(1) …. [19-16], [24-31] s 237(1)(a) …. [19-16] s 237(1)(b) …. [19-16] s 237(1)(c) …. [19-16] s 237(1)(d) …. [19-16] s 237(1)(e) …. [19-16] s 237(1)(f) …. [19-16] s 237(1)(g) …. [19-16] s 237(2) …. [19-16] s 237(3) …. [19-16] s 238 …. [24-31] s 242 …. [19-16] s 243 …. [19-16], [19-17], [24-18] s 250 …. [24-31] s 259 …. [11-35] s 259(1) …. [11-34] s 259(2) …. [11-35], [11-37] s 259(3) …. [11-35], [11-37] s 259(4) …. [11-37] s 259(5) …. [11-37] s 259(6) …. [11-37] s 260 …. [11-35], [11-36] s 261 …. [11-35], [31-18] s 263 …. [11-35]
s 263(2) …. [11-35] s 263(4) …. [11-35] s 263(6) …. [11-35] s 265 …. [11-34], [28-40], [31-04] s 267 …. [11-36] s 267(1) …. [11-34] s 267(2) …. [11-36], [11-37] s 267(2)(b) …. [11-36] s 267(3) …. [11-36], [11-37] s 267(4) …. [11-37] s 267(5) …. [11-37] s 268 …. [11-36] s 269 …. [11-36], [31-04] s 269(3) …. [11-36] s 270 …. [11-34] Ch 2 …. [19-13] Ch 3 …. [19-13] Pt 2-3 …. [24-28] Pt 3-1 …. [26-21], [26-23] Pt 3-1 Div 1 …. [19-19] Pt 3-2 Div 1A …. [11-34] Pt 3-2 Div 1B …. [11-34] Pt 5-4 Div 2 …. [16-17] National Credit Code …. [24-20], [31-15], [37-41] s 23 …. [37-41] ss 76–81 …. [24-20] s 76(8) …. [24-20]
s 77 …. [37-41]
COMMONWEALTH Australian Postal Corporation Act 1989 s 32 …. [3-35] Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 …. [24-28] s 12CA …. [24-15] s 12CB …. [24-15], [24-17], [24-19] s 12CC …. [24-15], [24-17] s 12DA …. [19-03] Banking Act 1959 s 8 …. [25-14] Bankruptcy Act 1966 …. [17-12] s 58(1) …. [15-62] s 120 …. [25-18] s 121 …. [25-18] s 122(1) …. [25-18] s 122(2) …. [25-18] s 123(1) …. [15-62] s 125 …. [15-62] s 126(1) …. [15-62] Pt IV Div 6 …. [6-60] Bills of Exchange Act 1909 s 8(1) …. [9-12] s 32(1) …. [6-33] ss 36–43 …. [17-07] s 50 …. [28-14]
Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1991 …. [16-26] Cheques Act 1986 s 35(1)(a) …. [6-33] Competition and Consumer Act 2010 …. [1-18], [1-21], [19-02], [26-12], [2738] s 4(1) …. , [26-21] s 4D …. [26-22] s 4M …. [26-22] s 6 …. [26-21] s 45 …. [26-22] s 45(1) …. [26-23] s 45(2) …. [26-23] s 45B(1) …. [26-23] s 45E(1) …. [26-23] s 45E(2) …. [26-23] s 46 …. [26-23] s 47…. [26-23] s 48 …. [16-14], [26-23] s 50 …. [26-23] s 51 …. [26-22] s 68 …. [1-20] s 76 …. [26-23] s 78 …. [26-23] s 86(1) …. [26-21] s 86(2) …. [26-21] s 86A …. [26-21] s 87(1) …. [26-23]
s 87(2)(a) …. [26-23] s 131A(2)(b) …. [24-29] s 137D …. [24-31] Pt IV …. [16-04], [26-19], [26-21], [26-22], [26-23] Pt IVB …. [24-17] Pt VI …. [26-21] Pt VIA …. [19-13] Sch 2 …. [1-21] Competition and Consumer Legislation Amendment Act 2011 …. [24-17] Corporations Act 2001 …. [15-46], [15-47], [15-55] s 9 …. [15-52] s 124 …. [15-49] s 125(1) …. [15-49] s 125(2) …. [15-49] s 126 …. [15-51], [15-52], [15-54] s 127 …. [15-51], [15-52] s 131 …. [15-54] s 140(1) …. [8-10] s 140(2) …. [8-10] Currency Act 1965 s 16 …. [28-15] Defence Act 1903 s 118 …. [25-25] Electronic Transactions Act 1999 …. [3-38] Family Law Act 1975 …. [25-33] Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 ss 21–33 …. [36-25]
Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 s 995-1(1) …. [24-17] Insurance Contracts Act 1984 …. [18-15] s 37 …. [10-17] s 43 …. [25-26] s 48 …. [16-17], [16-18] s 48A …. [16-17] s 49 …. [16-17] s 50 …. [33-33] s 51 …. [16-17] Judiciary Act 1903 s 31 …. [36-25] s 32 …. [36-25] Pt IX …. [15-58] Pt IXA …. [15-58] Life Insurance Act 1945 s 199(1) …. [15-06] s 199(2) …. [15-03] s 200 …. [17-07] Marine Insurance Act 1909 …. [9-12] s 39(1) …. [13-07] s 56(1) …. [17-07] s 56(2) …. [17-07] s 57 …. [17-07] Marriage Act 1961 …. [25-33] s 11 …. [15-10]
s 111A …. [9-08], [30-37] National Consumer Credit Protection Act 2009 Sch 1 …. [9-12], [24-20], [31-15], [37-41] National Security (Exchange Control) Regulations …. [27-37] Petroleum Retail Marketing Franchise Act 1980 s 7 …. [25-17] Reserve Bank Act 1959 s 36(1) …. [28-15] Superannuation Act 1976 s 118 …. [17-12] Trade Practices Act 1974 …. [1-21], [2-20], [14-25], [24-19], [27-38] s 4B …. [11-27] s 6 …. [2-15] s 51A …. [19-08] s 51AA …. [24-15], [24-16] s 51AB …. [24-15], [24-17], [24-19] s 51AC …. [24-15], [24-17], [24-19] s 52 …. [1-22], [19-01], [19-02], [19-06], [19-11], [19-12], [19-17] s 52A …. [24-19] s 53(g) …. [19-19] s 55 …. [19-13] s 56 …. [3-14], [3-15] s 68 …. [25-17] s 75A …. [25-17] s 75AZC(1)(k) …. [19-19] s 75B …. [19-15] s 80 …. [19-12], [24-18]
s 82 …. [19-12], [19-13], [19-14], [24-18] s 87 …. [19-16], [24-18] s 87(2)(a) …. [19-17] Pt V …. [19-12] Pt V Div 2 …. [11-23], [11-26], [25-17] Pt VIA …. [19-13]
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY Age of Majority Act 1974 …. [15-03] Associations Incorporation Act 1991 …. [15-55] Civil Law (Property) Act 2006 …. [16-15] s 204(1) …. [9-09], [9-14] s 204(2) …. [9-24] s 205 …. [17-07] s 241 …. [24-05] s 248 …. [28-27] s 250 …. [28-21] s 253(2) …. [28-27] s 426(1) …. [31-04] s 426(4) …. [31-14] s 501 …. [29-11] Pt 2.6 …. [35-29] Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002 s 40 …. [35-30] s 41(1) …. [35-30] s 41(3) …. [35-30] s 41(4) …. [35-30]
s 173(b)(i) …. [18-59] s 173(b)(ii) …. [18-56] s 173(b)(iii) …. [18-56] s 174 …. [18-76] s 174(3)(a) …. [18-78] s 174(3)(b) …. [18-78] s 175 …. [18-75] s 177(1) …. [18-74] Ch 13 …. [18-74] Commercial Arbitration Act 1986 …. [1-15] Conveyancing Act 1919 s 66K …. [33-33] Court Procedures Act 2004 …. [15-58] Domestic Relationships Act 1994 Pt 4 …. [25-32] Electronic Transactions Act 2001 …. [3-38] Imperial Acts (Substituted Provisions) Act 1986 s 3 …. [9-07], [9-08], [9-10] s 3(1) …. [9-05], [9-06] Sch 1 …. [9-05], [9-06] Sch 2 Pt 11 cl 4(1) …. [9-07], [9-08], [9-10] Limitation Act 1985 s 32 …. [6-34] Married Persons’ Property Act 1986 s 3(1) …. [15-63] Mercantile Law Act 1962 s 15 …. [15-18]
s 16 …. [18-05] Sale of Goods Act 1954 s 5(1) …. [13-06] s 7 …. [15-10], [15-44] s 11 …. [20-16] s 12 …. [33-12] s 13(2) …. [38-18] s 15(1) …. [30-52] s 16(1) …. [31-15] s 16(2) …. [13-04], [30-10] s 16(4) …. [31-15] s 17 …. [11-18] s 18 …. [11-19] s 19(2) …. [11-20] s 19(4) …. [11-21] s 20 …. [11-22] s 32 …. [28-08] s 33(5) …. [28-15] s 34 …. [11-05] s 35(2) …. [30-10], [30-38] s 39 …. [31-15] s 41 …. [35-39] s 44 …. [28-39] s 52(1) …. [37-04] s 52(2) …. [28-06] s 53 …. [35-40] s 54 …. [35-42]
s 55 …. [39-05] s 56 …. [35-38] s 57 …. [35-44] s 60 …. [3-11] s 62(1) …. [13-13], [18-61] s 62(1A) …. [18-61] Sale of Goods Act 1975 s 3 …. [9-11] Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1987 …. [1-20] Supreme Court Act 1933 s 20 …. [36-25] ss 25–34 …. [36-25] Unlawful Gambling Act 2009 s 47 …. [25-16]
NEW SOUTH WALES Agricultural Holdings Act 1941 …. [9-10] Anti-Discrimination Act 1977 …. [15-63] Associations Incorporation Act 2009 …. [15-55] Builders Licensing Act 1971 s 45 …. [9-20], [38-07] Building Operations and Building Materials Control Act 1945 …. [27-13] Cattle Slaughtering and Diseased Animals and Meat Act 1902 s 47 …. [25-09], [25-14] s 48 …. [25-14] Civil Liability Act 2002 s 5O …. [29-17]
Sch 2, cl 2 …. [25-29] Commercial Arbitration Act 2010 …. [1-15] s 17 …. [25-26] s 17J …. [25-26] s 25 …. [31-12] Companies Act 1961 s 67 …. [27-37] Contracts Review Act 1980 …. [14-22], [18-03], [23-16], [24-19], [24-20], [2421], [24-27], [24-28], [30-36], [31-15], [32-11], [37-07] s 4(1) …. [24-23] s 4(2) …. [24-22] s 5 …. [24-22] s 6 …. [24-22] s 6(1) …. [24-22] s 6(2) …. [24-22] s 7 …. [24-23], [24-25], [24-26] s 7(1) …. [24-23] s 8 …. [24-25], [38-04] s 9 …. [24-24] s 9(1) …. [24-24] s 9(2) …. [24-24] s 9(2)(j) …. [22-30] s 9(4) …. [24-24] s 9(5) …. [24-24] s 10 …. [24-21] s 11 …. [24-25] s 12 …. [24-25]
s 16 …. [24-25] s 17 …. [24-23] s 18 …. [24-23] s 21 …. [24-22] Sch 1 …. [24-25], [38-04] Conveyancing Act 1919 s 12 …. [17-07] s 13 …. [29-11], [30-49], [30-59] s 36C …. [16-15] s 37C …. [24-05] s 38 …. [6-12] s 51A …. [6-12] s 54A …. [7-12] s 54A(1) …. [9-09] s 54A(2) …. [9-24] s 54B …. [36-22] s 54B(2) …. [36-22] s 54B(3) …. [36-22] s 55 …. [39-09] s 55(2A) …. [38-34] s 129(1) …. [31-04] s 129(2) …. [31-14] s 133E …. [28-37] s 144(1) …. [28-27] s 144(5) …. [28-27] Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1898 s 82 …. [15-06]
Crown Lands Act 1884 …. [25-21], [27-30] Crown Proceedings Act 1988 …. [15-58] Electronic Transactions Act 2000 …. [3-38] s 5 …. [3-38] ss 7–9 …. [3-38] s 13(1) …. [3-38] s 13A(1) …. [3-38] s 13A(2) …. [3-38] s 13B …. [3-38] s 13B(1) …. [3-38] s 13B(2) …. [3-38] s 13B(3) …. [3-38] s 13B(4) …. [3-38] s 14A …. [3-38] s 14B(1) …. [3-38] s 14C …. [3-38] s 14D …. [3-38] s 14D(1) …. [3-38] s 14D(2) …. [3-38] s 14D(3) …. [3-38] s 14D(4) …. [3-38] s 14E …. [3-38] s 15 …. [3-38] Pt 2A …. [3-38] Fair Trading Act 1987 Pt 3 …. [1-21] Fair Trading Amendment (Australian Consumer Law) Act 2010 …. [1-21]
Fisheries and Oyster Farms Act 1935 …. [27-23] Frustrated Contracts Act 1978 …. [38-04] s 4 …. [34-13] s 5(1) …. [34-17], [34-19] s 5(2)(a) …. [34-17] s 5(3) …. [34-17] s 5(4) …. [34-13] s 6 …. [34-14] s 6(1) …. [34-14] s 6(2) …. [34-14] s 6(3) …. [34-14] s 7 …. [34-15] s 8 …. [34-16], [34-38] s 9 …. [34-17] ss 9–13 …. [34-21], [34-22] s 10 …. [34-17], [34-18] s 11 …. [34-18], [34-19], [34-22] s 11(1) …. [34-18] s 11(2) …. [34-18] s 12 …. [34-19] s 13 …. [34-20] s 13(1) …. [34-20] s 13(2) …. [34-20] s 14 …. [34-21] s 15 …. [34-22] s 15(1) …. [34-22] s 15(2)–(6) …. [34-22]
s 15(2) …. [34-22] s 15(3) …. [34-22] s 15(7) …. [34-22] Imperial Acts Application Act 1969 s 8(1) …. [9-05], [9-06], [9-07], [9-08], [9-10] Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1965 s 8 …. [35-30] s 9(1) …. [35-30] s 9(2) …. [35-30] s 9(3) …. [35-30] Limitation Act 1969 s 54 …. [6-34] Liquor Act 1912 …. [25-23] Local Government Act 1919 …. [18-35], [25-13] s 311 …. [25-03] s 317A …. [25-03] Maintenance, Champerty and Barratry Abolition Act 1993 s 3 …. [25-29] s 4 …. [25-29] s 6 …. [25-29] Married Persons (Equality of Status) Act 1996 …. [15-63] Mining on Private Lands Act 1894 s 33 …. [25-21] Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970 …. [15-26] s 6(1) …. [15-27] s 6(3) …. [15-27] s 18 …. [15-07]
s 19 …. [15-08], [15-28] s 20 …. [15-33], [15-34] s 20(2) …. [15-33] s 20(3) …. [15-33] s 22 …. [15-28] s 23 …. [15-28] s 24 …. [15-28] s 26 …. [15-29] s 28 …. [15-34] s 29 …. [15-34] s 30 …. [15-30] s 31 …. [15-31] s 33 …. [15-31] s 34 …. [15-31] s 36 …. [15-31] s 37 …. [15-32], [15-33] s 38 …. [15-31] s 39 …. [15-30] s 47 …. [15-25] s 48 …. [15-35] Sch 1 …. [15-18] Motor Vehicles (Third Party Insurance) Act 1942 s 10(7) …. [16-17] Property (Relationships) Act 1984 s 45(1) …. [25-32] s 46 …. [25-32] Pt 4 …. [25-32]
Real Property Act 1900 …. [24-23] Restraints of Trade Act 1976 …. [26-03], [26-21], [27-31] s 3(1) …. [27-38] s 3(2) …. [27-38] s 3(3) …. [27-38] s 4(1) …. [27-38], [27-39] s 4(2) …. [27-38] s 4(3) …. [27-38], [27-39] s 4(4) …. [27-38] s 4(5) …. [27-38] Sale of Goods Act 1923 s 4(2) …. [13-13], [18-61] s 4(2A) …. [18-61] s 4(2A)(a) …. [18-59] s 4(2A)(b) …. [18-56] s 4(5) …. [13-13] s 5(1) …. [13-05] s 5(2) …. [2-12] s 7 …. [15-10], [15-44] s 11 …. [20-16] s 12 …. [33-12], [34-13] s 13(2) …. [38-18] s 15(1) …. [30-52] s 16(1) …. [31-15] s 16(2) …. [13-04], [30-10] s 16(3) …. [31-15] s 17 …. [11-18]
s 18 …. [11-19], [13-14] s 19 …. [13-14] s 19(1) …. [11-20], [11-21] s 19(2) …. [11-21] s 19(4) …. [13-14] s 20 …. [11-22], [13-14] s 31 …. [13-19], [28-08] s 32(4) …. [28-15] s 33 …. [11-05] s 34(2) …. [30-10], [30-38] s 38 …. [31-15] s 38(1) …. [18-62] s 38(2) …. [18-62] s 40 …. [35-39] s 43 …. [28-39] s 51(1) …. [37-04] s 51(2) …. [28-06], [37-04] s 52 …. [35-40] s 52(2) …. [35-40] s 52(3) …. [35-40] s 53 …. [35-42] s 53(2) …. [35-42], [36-04] s 53(3) …. [35-42], [36-04] s 54 …. [35-38] s 54(1) …. [35-38] s 54(2) …. [35-38] s 54(3) …. [35-38]
s 54(4) …. [35-38] s 55 …. [35-44], [38-06] s 56 …. [39-05] s 57 …. [13-14] s 60 …. [3-11] s 62 …. [13-14], [14-25] s 64 …. [14-25] s 64(1) …. [14-25] s 64(2) …. [14-25] s 64(3) …. [11-21] s 64(4) …. [11-21] Pt III …. [15-33] Pt VIII …. [11-21] Sale of Goods (Amendment) Act 1988 s 3 …. [9-11] Sch 1 cl 2 …. [9-11] Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1986 …. [1-20] Sea-Carriage Documents Act 1997 …. [16-26] Supreme Court Act 1970 s 68 …. [36-25] s 94 …. [36-07] Testator’s Family Maintenance and Guardianship of Infants Act 1916 …. [2527] Transport Act 1930 …. [39-05] Unlawful Gambling Act 1998 s 56 …. [25-16] Usury Bills of Lading and Written Memoranda Act 1902
s 9 …. [15-18] Usury Bills of Lading and Written Memoranda (Repeal) Act 1990 s 3 …. [18-05] Wheat Industry Stabilization Act 1958 s 11 …. [27-25] s 12 …. [27-25] Workers’ Compensation Act 1926 …. [36-24]
NORTHERN TERRITORY Age of Majority Act 1981 …. [15-03] Associations Incorporation Act 1963 …. [15-55] Commercial Arbitration (National Uniform Legislation) Act 2011 …. [1-15] s 25 …. [31-12] Crown Proceedings Act 1993 …. [15-58] De Facto Relationships Act 1991 s 3 …. [25-32] s 44 …. [25-32] s 45 …. [25-32] Law of Property Act 2000 s 5(c) …. [9-24] s 12 …. [16-15] s 56 …. [16-16], [16-19], [16-23] s 56(7) …. [16-23] s 58 …. [9-07] s 58(2) …. [9-13] s 62 …. [9-09] s 65 …. [29-11]
s 70 …. [36-22] s 71(1) …. [39-09] s 137 …. [31-04], [31-14] s 138 …. [31-04] s 182(1) …. [17-07] s 210 …. [24-05] s 211 …. [28-27] s 212(1) …. [28-27] s 213(2) …. [28-27] s 221(1) …. [9-05], [9-06], [9-08], [9-10] Sch 4 …. [9-05], [9-06], [9-08], [9-10] Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1956 s 15 …. [35-30] s 16 …. [35-30] s 16(2) …. [35-30] s 16(2A) …. [35-30] Limitation Act 1981 s 41 …. [6-34] Married Persons (Equality of Status) Act 1989 …. [15-63] Sale of Goods Act 1972 s 4(2) …. [13-13], [18-61] s 5(1) …. [13-05] s 7 …. [15-10], [15-44] s 10 …. [20-16] s 12 …. [33-12] s 13(2) …. [38-18] s 15(1) …. [30-52]
s 16(1) …. [31-15] s 16(2) …. [13-04], [30-10] s 16(4) …. [31-15] s 17 …. [11-18] s 18 …. [11-19] s 19(a) …. [11-20] s 19(b) …. [11-21] s 20 …. [11-22] s 31 …. [28-08] s 32(5) …. [28-15] s 33 …. [11-05] s 34(2) …. [30-10], [30-38] s 38 …. [31-15] s 40 …. [35-39] s 43 …. [28-39] s 51(1) …. [37-04] s 51(2) …. [28-06] s 52 …. [35-40] s 53 …. [35-42] s 54 …. [35-38] s 55 …. [35-44] s 56 …. [39-05] s 57 …. [13-14] s 60 …. [3-11] Sale of Goods Amendment Act 1999 s 2 …. [9-11] Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1987 …. [1-20]
Supreme Court Act 1979 Pt IV …. [36-25] Unlawful Betting Act s 4 …. [25-16]
QUEENSLAND Age of Majority Act 1974 …. [15-03] Associations Incorporation Act 1981 …. [15-55] Commercial Arbitration Act 1990 …. [1-15] s 46 …. [31-12] Crown Proceedings Act 1980 …. [15-58] Electronic Transactions Act 2001 …. [3-38] Land Acts 1910–1924 …. [36-26] Law Reform Act 1995 s 5 …. [35-30] s 10(1) …. [35-30] s 10(2) …. [35-30] s 10(2A) …. [35-30] s 18 …. [15-63] Limitation of Actions Act 1974 s 35(3) …. [6-34] Married Women’s Property Act 1890 …. [15-63] Property Law Act 1974 …. [9-05], [9-06], [9-08], [9-10], [9-11] s 3(2) …. [15-18] s 6(d) …. [9-24] s 13 …. [16-15] s 55 …. [16-16], [16-19], [16-23]
s 55(7) …. [16-23] s 56 …. [9-07] s 56(2) …. [9-13] s 59 …. [9-09] s 62 …. [29-11] s 68(1) …. [36-21], [36-22] s 69 …. [39-09] s 72 …. [31-04] s 124(1) …. [31-04] s 124(2) …. [31-14] s 128 …. [28-37] s 199 …. [17-07] s 227 …. [15-52] s 230 …. [24-05] s 231 …. [28-27] s 232 …. [28-27] s 233(2) …. [28-27] Racing Act 2002 s 341 …. [25-16] Sale of Goods Act 1896 s 3(1) …. [13-05] s 5 …. [15-10], [15-44] s 9 …. [20-16] s 10 …. [33-12] s 11(2) …. [38-18] s 13(1) …. [30-52] s 14(1) …. [31-15]
s 14(2) …. [13-04], [30-10] s 14(3) …. [31-15] s 15 …. [11-18] s 16 …. [11-19] s 17(1) …. [11-20] s 17(2) …. [11-21] s 18 …. [11-22] s 30 …. [28-08] s 31(4) …. [28-15] s 32 …. [11-05] s 33(2) …. [30-10], [30-38] s 37 …. [31-15] s 39 …. [35-39] s 42 …. [28-39] s 50(1) …. [37-04] s 50(2) …. [28-06] s 51 …. [35-40] s 52 …. [35-42] s 53 …. [39-05] s 54 …. [35-38] s 55 …. [35-44] s 56 …. [13-14] s 59 …. [2-11], [3-11] s 61(2) …. [13-13], [18-61] Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1986 …. [1-20] Statute of Frauds 1972 s 3 …. [9-05], [9-06], [9-08], [9-10], [9-11], [18-05]
Statute of Frauds and Limitations Act 1867 s 12 …. [15-18]
SOUTH AUSTRALIA Age of Majority (Reduction) Act 1971 …. [15-03] Associations Incorporation Act 1985 …. [15-55] Commercial Arbitration Act 2011 …. [1-15] s 25 …. [31-12] Crown Proceedings Act 1992 …. [15-58] Domestic Partners Property Act 1996 Pt 2 …. [25-32] Electronic Transactions Act 2000 …. [3-38] Frustrated Contracts Act 1988 s 3(1) …. [34-37], [34-39], [34-40], [34-41] s 3(2) …. [34-41] s 3(3) …. [34-40] s 3(4) …. [34-40] s 4(1)(b) …. [34-37] s 4(2) …. [34-37] s 4(3) …. [34-37], [34-41] s 5 …. [34-38] s 6 …. [34-38] s 6(1) …. [34-38] s 6(2) …. [34-38] s 7 …. [34-41] s 7(1) …. [34-36], [34-39] s 7(2) …. [34-39], [34-40]
s 7(4) …. [34-39] s 7(5) …. [34-39] s 7(6) …. [34-39] s 7(7) …. [34-39] s 8 …. [34-42] Landlord and Tenant Act 1936 s 10 …. [31-04] s 11 …. [31-14] Law of Property Act 1936 s 15 …. [17-07] s 16 …. [29-11] s 26(1) …. [9-09] s 26(2) …. [9-24] s 34(1) …. [16-15] s 63 …. [28-27] s 64 …. [28-27] s 68 …. [28-27] s 88 …. [24-05] ss 92–111 …. [15-63] Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2001 s 3 …. [35-30] s 7 …. [35-30] s 7(3) …. [35-30] Limitation of Actions Act 1936 s 42 …. [6-34] Lottery and Gaming Act 1936 s 50 …. [25-16]
s 50A …. [25-16] Minors’ Contracts (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1979 s 4 …. [15-18] s 5 …. [15-25] s 6 …. [15-06] s 7 …. [15-20] s 8 …. [15-06] Misrepresentation Act 1972 …. [18-74] s 4(1) …. [18-74] s 6(1)(a) …. [18-59] s 6(1)(b) …. [18-56] s 6(1)(c) …. [18-56] s 6(2) …. [18-52] s 7(1) …. [18-76] s 7(2)(a) …. [18-78] s 7(2)(b) …. [18-78] s 7(3) …. [18-75] Prices Act 1948–1951 …. [27-20] Sale of Goods Act 1895 s 2 …. [15-10], [15-44] s 6 …. [20-16] s 7 …. [33-12], [34-37] s 8(2) …. [38-18] s 10(1) …. [30-52] s 11(1) …. [31-15] s 11(2) …. [13-04], [30-10] s 11(3) …. [31-15]
s 12 …. [11-18] s 13 …. [11-19] s 14(a) …. [11-20] s 14(b) …. [11-21] s 15 …. [11-22] s 28 …. [28-08] s 29(4) …. [28-15] s 30 …. [11-05] s 31(2) …. [30-10], [30-38] s 35 …. [31-15] s 37 …. [35-39] s 40 …. [28-39] s 48(1) …. [37-04] s 48(2) …. [28-06] s 49 …. [35-40] s 50 …. [35-42] s 51 …. [39-05] s 52 …. [35-38] s 53 …. [35-44] s 54 …. [13-14] s 57 …. [3-11] s 59(2) …. [13-13], [18-61] s 60(1) …. [13-05] Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1986 …. [1-20] Statutes Amendment (Enforcement of Contracts) Act 1982 s 3 …. [9-05], [9-06], [9-07], [9-08] s 4 …. [9-05], [9-11]
Supreme Court Act 1935 s 30 …. [36-25] Town Planning and Development Act 1920 …. [27-27] s 23 …. [25-10] s 23(c) …. [25-10] s 44 …. [25-10]
TASMANIA Age of Majority Act 1973 …. [15-03] Apportionment Act 1871 s 2 …. [28-27] s 5 …. [28-27] s 7 …. [28-27] Associations Incorporation Act 1964 …. [15-55] Commercial Arbitration Act 1986 …. [1-15] s 46 …. [31-12] Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1884 s 15(1) …. [31-04] s 15(2) …. [31-14] s 36(1) …. [9-09] s 36(2) …. [9-24] s 42 …. [24-05] s 61 …. [16-15] s 86 …. [17-07] Crown Proceedings Act 1993 …. [15-58] Electronic Transactions Act 2000 …. [3-38] Infants’ Relief Act 1875
s 2 …. [15-18] Limitation Act 1974 s 29(4) …. [6-34] Married Women’s Property Act 1935 …. [15-63] Mercantile Law Act 1935 s 6 …. [9-06], [9-07], [9-08], [9-10] s 11 …. [18-05] s 12 …. [9-13] Minors’ Contracts Act 1988 …. [15-18] s 4 …. [15-25] Powers of Attorney Act 2000 s 9 …. [16-15] Racing Regulation Act 2004 s 103 …. [25-16] Sale of Goods Act 1896 s 3(1) …. [9-11], [13-05] s 5(2) …. [13-13], [18-61] s 7 …. [15-10], [15-44] s 9 …. [9-11] s 11 …. [20-16] s 12 …. [33-12] s 13(2) …. [38-18] s 15 …. [30-52] s 16(1) …. [31-15] s 16(2) …. [13-04], [30-10] s 16(3) …. [31-15] s 17 …. [11-18]
s 18 …. [11-19] s 19(a) …. [11-20] s 19(b) …. [11-21] s 20 …. [11-22] s 33 …. [28-08] s 34(4) …. [28-15] s 35 …. [11-05] s 36(2) …. [30-10], [30-38] s 40 …. [31-15] s 42 …. [35-39] s 45 …. [28-39] s 53(1) …. [37-04] s 53(2) …. [28-06] s 54 …. [35-40] s 55 …. [35-42] s 56 …. [39-05] s 57 …. [35-38] s 58 …. [35-44] s 59 …. [13-14] s 62 …. [3-11] Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1987 …. [1-20] Supreme Court Civil Procedure Act 1932 s 11(7) …. [29-11] s 11(13) …. [36-25] Tortfeasors and Contributory Negligence Act 1954 s 4(1)(a) …. [35-30] s 4(1)(b) …. [35-30]
Wrongs Act 1954 s 2 …. [35-30] s 4 …. [35-30]
VICTORIA Age of Majority Act 1977 …. [15-03] Associations Incorporation Act 1981 …. [15-55] Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 s 3(1) …. [34-24] s 4 …. [34-32] s 24 …. [18-61] s 24(1) …. [18-62] s 24(2) …. [18-59] s 25 …. [31-15] s 25(4) …. [38-06] s 25(5) …. [38-06] s 26 …. [30-04], [31-15] s 26(1)(b) …. [18-40] s 32TA …. [25-12] s 35(1) …. [34-23] s 35(2) …. [34-32] s 35(3) …. [34-33] s 36 …. [34-25], [34-27] s 36(1) …. [34-25] s 36(2) …. [34-24] s 37 …. [34-24], [34-25], [34-26], [34-27] s 38 …. [34-27], [34-30]
s 38(4) …. [34-30] s 39 …. [34-27], [34-28] s 40 …. [34-27], [34-29] s 41 …. [34-31], [34-38] s 42 …. [34-34] s 43 …. [34-35] Pt 3.1 …. [25-12] Pt 3.2 …. [34-23], [34-28], [34-32], [34-33], [34-34], [34-35] Pt 3.2 Div 2 …. [34-31] Commercial Arbitration Act 1986 …. [1-15] s 25 …. [31-12] Companies (Victoria) Code …. [19-17] Crown Proceedings Act 1958 …. [15-58] Discharged Soldiers Settlement Act 1917 s 35 …. [25-24] Discharged Soldiers Settlement Act 1919 s 35 …. [25-24] Electronic Transactions (Victoria) Act 2000 …. [3-38] Fair Trading Act 1999 …. [24-28] Pt 2C …. [34-23] Frustrated Contracts Act 1959 …. [34-23] Gambling Regulation Act 2003 s 2.4.1 …. [25-16] Goods Act 1958 s 3(1) …. [13-05] s 4(2) …. [13-13], [18-61] s 7 …. [15-10], [15-44]
s 11 …. [20-16] s 12 …. [33-12], [34-23], [34-24] s 13(2) …. [38-18] s 15 …. [30-52] s 16(1) …. [31-15] s 16(2) …. [13-04], [30-10] s 16(3) …. [31-15] s 17 …. [11-18] s 18 …. [11-19] s 19(a) …. [11-20] s 19(b) …. [11-21] s 20 …. [11-22] s 35 …. [28-08] s 36(4) …. [28-15] s 37 …. [11-05] s 38(2) …. [30-10], [30-38] s 42 …. [31-15] s 44 …. [35-39] s 47 …. [28-39] s 55(1) …. [37-04] s 55(2) …. [28-06] s 56 …. [35-40] s 57 …. [35-42] s 58 …. [39-05] s 59 …. [35-38] s 60 …. [35-44] s 61 …. [13-14]
s 64 …. [3-11] s 89(2) …. [11-21] s 99(1) …. [31-15] Instruments Act 1958 s 31(a) …. [15-52] s 126 …. [9-06], [9-07], [9-08], [9-09], [9-10], [9-14] s 128 …. [18-05] s 129 …. [9-13] Instruments (Corporate Bodies Contracts) Act 1967 …. [15-52] Land Act 1865 …. [27-07] Limitation of Actions Act 1958 s 24(3) …. [6-34] Marriage Act 1958 Pt VIII …. [15-63] Prices Regulation Act 1948 s 25(1) …. [25-13] Property Law Act 1958 s 28B …. [15-03] s 41 …. [29-11] s 49(2) …. [38-34] s 55(d) …. [9-24] s 56(1) …. [16-15] s 134 …. [17-07] s 146(1) …. [31-04] s 146(2) …. [31-14] s 175 …. [24-05] Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1987 …. [1-20]
s 9 …. [9-11] Supreme Court Act 1958 s 70 …. [15-18] s 71 …. [15-18] Supreme Court Act 1986 s 38 …. [36-25] s 49 …. [15-23] s 50 …. [15-18] s 51 …. [15-18] s 53(1) …. [28-27] s 53(4) …. [28-27] s 54 …. [28-27] s 85 …. [31-14] Wrongs Act 1958 s 25 …. [35-30] s 26(1) …. [35-30] s 26(1A) …. [35-30] s 26(1B) …. [35-30]
WESTERN AUSTRALIA Adoption of Imperial Enactments Act 1867 (31 Vic No 8) …. [9-13] Age of Majority Act 1972 …. [15-03] Associations Incorporation Act 1987 …. [15-55] Commercial Arbitration Act 1985 …. [1-15] s 46 …. [31-12] Crown Suits Act 1947 …. [15-58] Electronic Transactions Act 2011 …. [3-38]
Gaming and Betting (Contracts and Securities) Act 1985 s 4 …. [25-16] Law Reform (Contributory Negligence and Tortfeasors’ Contribution) Act 1947 s 3A …. [35-30] s 4(1) …. [35-30] s 4(1)(a) …. [35-30] s 4(1)(b) …. [35-30] Law Reform (Statute of Frauds) Act 1962 s 2 …. [9-05], [9-06], [9-07], [9-08], [9-09], [9-10] Limitation Act 1935 s 44 …. [6-34] Married Women’s Property Act 1892 …. [15-63] Mercantile Law Amendment Act 1856 (UK) s 3 …. [9-13] Property Law Act 1969 s 11 …. [16-16] s 11(1) …. [16-15] s 20 …. [17-07] s 21 …. [29-11] s 36(d) …. [9-24] s 81(1) …. [31-04] s 81(2) …. [31-14] s 83C …. [28-37] s 92 …. [24-05] s 130(1) …. [28-27] s 131 …. [28-27] s 134(2) …. [28-27]
Sale of Goods Act 1895 s 2 …. [15-10], [15-44] s 4 …. [9-11] s 6 …. [20-16] s 7 …. [33-12] s 8(2) …. [38-18] s 10(1) …. [30-52] s 11(1) …. [31-15] s 11(2) …. [13-04], [30-10] s 11(3) …. [31-15] s 12 …. [11-18] s 13 …. [11-19] s 14(I) …. [11-20] s 14(II) …. [11-21] s 15 …. [11-22] s 28 …. [28-08] s 29(4) …. [28-15] s 30 …. [11-05] s 31(2) …. [30-10], [30-38] s 35 …. [31-15] s 37 …. [35-39] s 40 …. [28-39] s 48(1) …. [37-04] s 48(2) …. [28-06] s 49 …. [35-40] s 50 …. [35-42] s 51 …. [39-05]
s 52 …. [35-38] s 53 …. [35-44] s 54 …. [13-14] s 57 …. [3-11] s 59(2) …. [13-13], [18-61] s 60(1) …. 9-11, [13-05] Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1986 …. [1-20] Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp) s 4 …. [9-07], [9-09] Supreme Court Act 1935 s 25(10) …. [36-25]
CANADA Unconscionable Transactions Relief Act RSO, Ontario 1970, c 472 …. [24-21]
INTERNATIONAL European Community Directive of 1993 on Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts …. [24-28] United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods 1980 (Vienna Convention) .… [1-20], [9-11], [12-09], [30-10] Art 1(1) …. [1-20] Art 4 …. [1-20] Art 8(3) …. [12-09] Art 14 …. [1-20] Art 16 …. [2-04] Art 19 …. [3-24] Art 25 …. [30-27]
Art 49 …. [30-62] Art 64 …. [30-62] Art 71 …. [28-39] Art 72 …. [30-38] UN Convention on the Use of Electronic Communications in International Contracts 2005 …. [3-38] UNIDROIT Principles For International Commercial Contracts 2010 …. [1-20] Art 4.3 …. [12-09]
NEW ZEALAND Contracts (Privity) Act 1982 …. [16-16] Contractual Mistakes Act 1977 s 8 …. [20-43] Contractual Remedies Act 1979 …. [18-77] s 6 …. [18-71] s 7 …. [30-38]
UGANDA Rent Restriction Ordinance 1949 s 3(2) …. [27-20]
UNITED KINGDOM Age of Majority (Scotland) Act 1969 …. [15-03] Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1924 …. [16-26] Chancery Amendment Act 1858 (21 & 22 Vic c 27) …. [36-25] Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 …. [16-13], [16-16] Family Law Reform Act 1969…. [15-03]
Infants’ Relief Act 1874 …. [9-07], [15-23] s 2 …. [15-18] Judicature Act 1873 s 25(6) …. [17-07] s 25(7) …. [29-11] Law of Property Act 1925 s 40 …. [9-09] s 41 …. [29-11] s 56 …. [16-15] s 56(1) …. [16-15] s 174 …. [24-05] Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 s 2 …. [9-09], [9-21] s 2(1) …. [9-13] s 2(3) …. [9-14] s 2(5) …. [9-21] s 3 …. [36-21] Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943 …. [34-23] s 1(2) …. [34-35] s 2(5)(c) …. [34-13], [34-23] Lord Cairns’ Act (Chancery Amendment Act 1858) (21 & 22 Vic c 27) …. [924], [36-21], [36-25], [36-27], [36-28], [36-29] Merchant Shipping (Safety and Load Line Conventions) Act 1932 …. [25-15] Misrepresentation Act 1967 …. [36-09] s 1(a) …. [18-59] s 2(1) …. [18-74] Real Property Act 1845
s 5 …. [16-15] Rent Restriction Acts …. [20-29] Road and Rail Traffic Act 1933 …. [25-13], [27-11] Road Traffic Act 1960 s 203(3)(a) …. [27-05] Sale of Goods Act 1893 …. [10-15] s 4 …. [9-18], [9-25], [9-26] s 11 …. [14-04] s 13 …. [14-04] s 14 …. [11-23] s 61(2) …. [13-13] Sale of Goods Act 1979 …. [9-18] s 14(2) …. [11-21] s 14(2A) …. [11-21] s 62(2) …. [13-13] Sale of Reversions Act 1867 …. [24-05] Statute of Frauds 1677 (29 Car II c 3) …. [6-06], [9-01], [9-02], [9-07], [9-09], [9-12], [9-13], [9-14], [9-21], [21-04], [36-25], [38-07], [38-19] s 4 …. [8-03], [9-03], [9-04], [9-05], [9-07], [9-18], [9-24], [18-05] s 17 …. [9-04], [9-05], [9-11], [9-17], [9-18] Statute of Frauds (Amendment) Act 1828 (Lord Tenterden’s Act) …. [15-18] s 6 …. [18-05] Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999 …. [24-28]
UNITED STATES Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1936 s 1(a) …. [16-25] Uniform Commercial Code
s 2-207 …. [3-24] s 2-201(1) …. [9-11] s 2-609(1) …. [30-44]
RESTATEMENT OF THE LAW Restatement of the Law, Contracts (1932) …. [6-61] s 45 …. [7-23] s 90 …. [7-23] s 346 …. [36-12] s 348 …. [36-12] s 531 …. [3-49] Restatement, Second, Contracts (1979) …. [6-61] s 1 …. [3-49] s 22(2) …. [3-03] s 24 …. [3-07] s 26 …. [3-08] s 32 …. [3-49] s 40 …. [3-53] s 43 …. [3-44] s 45 …. [3-50] s 46 …. [3-46] s 48 …. [3-57] s 51 …. [3-39] s 63 …. [3-37] s 69 …. [3-29] s 71 …. [6-09] s 90(1) …. [7-23]
s 155 …. [21-07] s 174 …. [22-02] s 175 …. [22-02], [22-22] s 205 …. [28-09] s 209(1) …. [12-08] s 213 …. [12-08] s 243 …. [30-66] s 250 …. [30-38] s 256(1) …. [30-45] s 523 …. [3-41] s 568 …. [3-34]
Contents Preface Table of Cases Table of Statutes PART I — INTRODUCTION 1
Introduction
2
Good Faith and Commercial Construction PART II — AGREEMENT
3
Formation of Contract
4
Uncertain and Incomplete Promises
5
Conditional Promises
6
Promises Supported by Consideration
7
Promises Supported by Estoppel
8
Promises Intended to Create Legal Relations
9
Promises Requiring Written Evidence PART III — TERMS OF THE CONTRACT
10
Express Terms
11
Implied Terms and Consumer Guarantees
12
Construction Principles
13
Classification of Terms
14
Exclusion Clauses PART IV — PARTIES TO THE CONTRACT
15
Capacity
16
Privity of Contract and Plurality of Parties
17
Assignment of Contractual Rights PART V — VITIATING FACTORS
18
Contracts Induced by Misleading Conduct
19
Misleading Conduct under Statute
20
Contractual Mistake
21
Documents Mistakenly Signed
22
Duress
23
Undue Influence
24
Unconscionable Conduct and Unfair Terms PART VI — ILLEGALITY
25
Illegal Contracts
26
Contracts in Restraint of Trade
27
The Effects of Illegality PART VII — PERFORMANCE AND BREACH
28
Performance of the Contract
29
Breach of Contract PART VIII — TERMINATION FOR BREACH
30
Termination for Breach
31
Restrictions on Termination
32
Consequences of Termination PART IX — TERMINATION BY FRUSTRATION
33
Termination by Frustration
34
Consequences of Frustration PART X — REMEDIES
35
General Principles of Contract Damages
36
Particular Issues in Contract Damages
37
Recovery of Sums Fixed by the Contract
38 Restitution 39 Specific Performance 40 Injunction Bibliography Index
[page 1]
PART I
Introduction
[page 3]
Chapter 1
Introduction [1-01] Definition and content. A contract is a legally binding promise or agreement. The person (or persons) who makes a promise is termed the ‘promisor’. The person (or persons) to whom the promise is made is termed the ‘promisee’. The law of contract is concerned with four main topics: (1) the making of the contract; (2) the content, effect and enforceability of the terms of the contract; (3) the performance and discharge of the contract; and (4) rights and remedies in the event of default in the performance of the contract. More simply, the law of contract is concerned with the formation and enforcement of agreements which are recognised as contractual in nature. [1-02] Structure of this book. There may be an appearance of agreement but not the reality of it, or agreeing parties may not intend their agreement to be legally binding, or they may intend this but fail to achieve it for non-satisfaction of the law’s criteria of a contract. These matters are the concern of Part II of this book. Ascertaining whether agreement has been reached and if so the agreement’s content (its terms) are interrelated processes. Part III deals with identification and construction of the terms of a contract. Parts IV and V deal respectively with the special positions of particular parties and non-parties and with contracts which may be only contingently binding because, as a result of the circumstances in which contractual assent was given, one party or each party has a right to choose between rescinding and going on with the contract. Part V also deals with the statutory prohibition on misleading and deceptive conduct which has had a major impact on contract law.
While the entire subject of ‘contract’ is concerned with the impact of legal rules, there are common law and statutory rules founded in public policy which prohibit the making or implementation of certain agreements or which make certain agreements void or unenforceable. These rules and their effects are discussed under the heading ‘Illegality’ (Part VI). Parts VII (Performance and Breach), VIII (Termination) and X (Remedies) assume the existence of a contract. Part VII discusses the requirements of contractual performance and the circumstances which constitute a breach of contract. Part VIII deals with the existence and [page 4] exercise by a party of the right to terminate for breach or repudiation, and Part IX with the automatic discharge of a contract wrought by an event which has frustrated further performance of the contract. Finally, remedies available from the courts in relation to contracts are treated in Part X of the book. [1-03] The perfect contract book. The structure described above is fairly traditional. It is no more than a logical structure, reflecting an assumed sequence of events. But it is almost certainly not the ideal structure for teaching a contract course, where experience warns against leaving remedies until the end of the teaching program. If some philanthropist were to gather together a team of authors to write the perfect contract book, the team could be expected to include not only lawyers (both academic and practising) but also business people, philosophers, economists, political scientists, sociologists, anthropologists and psychologists (though never together in the one room!). They would be able to take into account not only the legal decisions and statutes which make up the ‘hard’ law of contract, and theories of contract but also the influence of political, economic and sociological theories and policies, the approaches taken in other legal systems (including customary law), and the psychology of the contract decisionmaking process. To do the job properly, the authors ought to have knowledge and experience of the whole range of influences on contract law. The aims of this book are more modest. The main goal is to explain the law of contract applied by the courts in the process of resolving contractual disputes. For university students doing contract as part of a law degree that must be a
minimum goal. The best way to achieve that goal is to search for principle. At times this may appear doctrinal, or even formalistic,1 but then that is how contract has been for the past three centuries. On the other hand, it would be wrong to assume that the answers to all the difficult questions are to be found in some pre-conceived general theory. Accordingly, as scholars (and students) of contract law we must question whether the principles have been properly applied, formulated or conceived. It is also appropriate to look for guidance in the contract law of other legal systems. But we make no attempt to provide either an exhaustive analysis of the hundreds of thousands of decisions which make up the law of contract or the external, that is non-legal, influences on contract law. An indication of some of the issues raised by external influences is given below.2
History of Contract [1-04] Relevance. It is a truism to say that the better one’s grasp of the historical development of an area of law, the better one’s understanding of [page 5] the modern law. Certainly this is true of the law of contract. Yet no attempt at a full ‘historical introduction’ is made here.3 [1-05] Forms of action. The story is one of the medieval common law’s limiting preoccupation with ‘forms of action’,4 those most relevant to the modern notion of contract being debt (to recover a liquidated sum of money) and covenant (an action on an agreement under seal); and above all it is one of the development of the action of assumpsit, and its variants. The early action of trespass was available in respect of wrongs in which the Crown had a special interest, but trespass ‘on the case’ became available in respect of purely private wrongs, for example, provision of medical services causing injury to the plaintiff’s person. The essence of such an action was misfeasance (‘misdoing’) but the pleadings (in Latin) would allege that the defendant undertook (assumpsit) the work. Since the focus of modern contract law is legally binding promises, the extension of assumpsit in the early 16th century to embrace non-performance of an undertaking (nonfeasance) marked a
most important advance. Although the importance of the decision for the recognition and enforcement of purely executory promises has probably been overstated,5 by the time of Slade’s Case6 assumpsit was established as an alternative to debt sur contract (debt based on contract) as a remedy for non-payment of a contract price where a contract was fully performed.7 The availability of the writ of debt, in respect of a claim for goods bargained and sold did not mean that an action on the case was not available. Thus, when John Slade sold goods to Humphrey Morley, but the latter refused to pay for them, Slade could at his election maintain either an action in debt or an action on the case in assumpsit. The decision was important in a number of respects, but what needs to be noticed in the present context is that a plaintiff faced with the choice which Slade faced could avoid the wager of law process. The action was, therefore, procedurally compelling, and the more commonly invoked form of action. The range of assumpsit was further extended by means of indebitatus assumpsit. It was held that an antecedent debt implied a promise by the debtor to pay that debt. Thus, whereas for an express promise special assumpsit lay, for such an implied promise indebitatus assumpsit was available to the creditor. Some such actions came to be recognised as lying outside contract, in quasicontract or, as it is now described today, restitution or unjust enrichment.8 In Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul9 it was held that the promise in such cases is more accurately described as [page 6] imposed than implied, hence the contrast with a consensually assumed contractual liability.10 Another important feature of the development of the modern law of contract was the severing of a large part of tort law, namely that concerned with undertakings (‘warranties’) as to the quality of a contract’s subject matter. Originally11 the action for breach of warranty, being in the nature of the action for deceit, was part of the law of misrepresentation. By the end of the 18th century the action for breach of warranty had lost most of its tortious characteristics and actions on warranties in contracts of sale were declared in assumpsit.
Assume that a plaintiff was always ready, willing and able to perform duly his or her own side of a contract but that the occasion for doing so had not arisen by the time the defendant failed to perform and the contract went off. In the 16th century it was accepted that assumpsit was available to the plaintiff in this ‘totally executory’ situation as well as where the plaintiff had performed.12 This development was an element in the establishment of a doctrine of consideration which is considered in detail in Chapter 6. At no time did English law accept that assumpsit should lie in respect of any and every promise. The ill-defined notion in the mid-16th century was that it should lie in respect of promises given for ‘good cause’. The subsequent case by case refinement of this notion was anything but scientific and logical but it is clear that the concept of consideration irrevocably characterised the English law of contract as a law of ‘bargains’.13 [1-06] Contract or contracts? Awareness of a ‘general law of contract’ is a phenomenon of the late 19th century. Previously such legal subjects as, for example, sales and insurance were recognised, but there was not a body of general principles linking them all.14 Under the synthesising influence of textbooks and law school curricula, the general principles have been derived. It would be easy, though wrong, to assume that such special contracts are the offshoots of the trunk of general principle rather than vice versa. Therefore, whatever may have been the position at various times in the past, for 100 years the courts have been seeking to find, elucidate and apply general principles. It is simply too late to turn back the clock even if it was ever desirable to do so. Since the usual approach today is to look for guidance in general principles, specific types of contract are regarded as governed by those principles unless there are good reasons for applying special rules. For example, in Cehave NV v Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH (The Hansa Nord),15 in the sale of goods context, Roskill LJ said16 that it is [page 7] ‘desirable that the same legal principle should apply to the law of contract as a whole and that different legal principles should not apply to different branches of that law’. [1-07] Contract and the law of obligations. For a long time lawyers were taught that contract and tort cover, generally in a mutually exclusive fashion, the field of common law obligation. Yet it is now clear that there is a substantial
degree of concordance of principle and concurrence of causes of action between the two.17 Thus, the absence of privity of contract, or consideration for an undertaking, are not the obstacles they once were to the recognition of liability. The recognition in Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd18 of the action in tort for negligent advice or statement causing economic loss has protected third parties who relied on such advice or statement to their detriment, to much the same extent as the person who paid for the advice or statement.19 The decision has influenced the courts to extend liability for negligently caused economic loss to a broader category of cases.20 Tort and contract are not mutually exclusive categories. Concurrent remedies may arise in tort and for breach of contract.21 To this extent, there has been a degree of coalescence of the law of contract and that of tort.22 But differences continue to manifest themselves,23 and it is incorrect to say that contract and tort cover the field. Thus, equity continues to be a source of obligation in some cases where there is no contract,24 and the law also recognises another branch of the law of obligations, based on a concept of unjust enrichment, and known as the law of restitution.25 These observations raise the question whether the preferable view is that there is a general law of obligations, which manifests itself in particular contracts, particular torts, specific principles of equity and specific responses to unjust enrichment.26 The authors do not propound this view, which negates the importance of the principles of contract law in establishing the institution known as ‘contract’. [page 8]
Assumptions of Contract Law [1-08] Paradigm situation. The modern law of contract assumes freedom of contract, that is, freedom to decide whether to contract and to negotiate contractual terms. It also assumes a paradigm situation of one-to-one negotiation of all the terms of an agreement by parties with equal bargaining strength concerned to maximise their individual positions. It must be recognised that although it is without doubt ‘an attribute of a free society … that it is generally left to parties themselves to make bargains’27 these assumptions are frequently contradicted or qualified by events in the real world. In many situations
adjustments must be made in the conception or application of principle based on these assumptions. [1-09] Qualifications. Without attempting an exhaustive analysis, four qualifications or contradictions to the paradigm situation, or its implications, may be mentioned.28 First, it is apparent that the assumptions are commercially oriented,29 if not predicated, on both parties entering into the contract for business purposes.30 Yet, in terms of quantity, and perhaps also in value, far more contracts are entered into by consumers than commercial people. It seems obvious then that a commercial seller may be in a better position, vis-à-vis the protection obtained from the law of contract, than the consumer buyer. This has prompted legislative intervention. Parliament has prohibited the making of some classes of contract, has required that others be in (or evidenced by) writing, has implied nonexcludable terms in others, and has provided for a ‘cooling-off’ period and right of cancellation in some circumstances.31 And more recent legislation has given courts jurisdiction to grant relief from a wide range of ‘unjust’ contracts.32 Second, the proposition that ‘will’ and ‘intention’ form the substratum of every contract is heavily attenuated by inequality of bargaining power between the individual and the public corporation or state instrumentality whose power is marked by such bodies’ common use of ‘standard form contracts’. Third, contracts are frequently very informal, with little if any genuine negotiation. The terms implied by law in certain commonly occurring contractual relationships, such as sale of goods, employment and lease, illustrate that it frequently falls to the law of contract itself to complete the parties’ bargain.33 Fourth, some rules of contract law exhibit a less general bias than the concern with commercial dealings implies. For example, the rules on [page 9] intention to create legal relations give the appearance of a bias against women and this is sometimes the effect of the decisions.34
Theories of Contract
[1-10] ‘Will’, ‘intent’ and the objective theory of contract. Although a subjective intention to contract is in one sense essential in all cases,35 it is a basic assumption of contract law that whether a contract has been agreed depends more on external manifestation than subjective intention. The modern law applies an ‘objective theory of contract’.36 The modern concern with ‘external manifestation’ relates to what each party has led the other to believe. People are judged by what they say and do rather than their subjective intentions. This means that contract law is not regulated by a ‘will theory’ under which a subjective meeting of the minds—consensus ad idem—on all the terms of an agreement is essential. Thus, Mason ACJ, Murphy and Deane JJ observed in Taylor v Johnson37 that as between subjective and objective theories of contract ‘while the sounds of conflict have not been completely stilled, the clear trend in decided cases and academic writings has been to leave the objective theory in command of the field’. In fact, however, it is by no means clear what the alleged contrast between subjective and objective theories is meant to convey. The idea that at any time English and Australian law embraced one to the exclusion of the other is not borne out by an examination of the authorities.38 Thus, the importance of ‘external manifestations’ was recognised even by those who placed greater emphasis on the need for consensus ad idem than contract lawyers of today. As Blackburn J explained in Smith v Hughes:39 If, whatever a man’s real intention may be, he so conducts himself that a reasonable man would believe that he was assenting to the terms proposed by the other party, and that other party upon that belief enters into the contract with him, the man thus conducting himself would be equally bound as if he had intended to agree to the other party’s terms.
The language used by Blackburn J can be explained in terms of estoppel.40 However, that is too complex an explanation. It is better to recognise that, for the modern law, a person’s intention is determined on the basis of the understanding of a reasonable person in the other party’s position.41 [page 10] [1-11] Is a subjective intention to contract essential? That consensus ad idem is still an essential element of contractual formation was treated as self-evident by Lord Diplock in Paal Wilson & Co A/S v Partenreederei Hannah Blumenthal,42 where he described43 the contrary view as a ‘novel heresy’.
Similarly, in Air Great Lakes Pty Ltd v K S Easter (Holdings) Pty Ltd44 McHugh JA said that ‘an intention to create a legally enforceable contract is a necessary element in the formation of a contract’. Lord Diplock’s statement was made in the context of decisions in which the English courts considered that delay in the prosecution of a submission to arbitration may constitute a contract to abandon the submission.45 The two controversial elements in these cases are whether the intention to abandon is judged subjectively, and an apparent conflict with the general rule46 that silence does not constitute acceptance of an offer. Lord Diplock was concerned in particular to reject47 a submission that where a contract is inferred from conduct —in this context delay—a party may rely on such conduct even though there is no belief that the other party intended to contract. The relevance of acceptance of an offer by silence48 to the objective theory is that if a contract may be inferred from conduct, there is no reason why silence, objectively considered, may not constitute a sufficient expression of intention. But, almost invariably, silence will be too equivocal to permit a reasonable person in the position of an offeror to infer that an offer has been accepted by an offeree’s silence.49 [1-12] Perspectives of objectivity. The two perspectives for objectivity discussed in the cases50 are the promisee’s perspective and that of a person detached from the parties themselves, that is, the proverbial ‘fly on the wall’. Notwithstanding the support which can be found for the latter,51 the better view is that when the courts speak of an objective theory of contract, they generally mean52 that words are to be interpreted according to the view which would be taken by a reasonable person in the position of the person to [page 11] whom they are addressed.53 Thus, in Paal Wilson & Co A/S v Partenreederei Hannah Blumenthal54 Lord Diplock referred55 to the intention of each party … as it has been communicated to and [reasonably] understood by the other (even though that which has been communicated does not represent the actual state of mind of the communicator) should coincide.
This perspective helps to explain why the approach is never wholly objective.56
[1-13] The changing conceptions of contract. A great deal of attention has been devoted to developing a theory which explains the phenomenon which we describe as ‘contract’ or ‘contract law’.57 It is difficult to isolate contract theory from substantive principles of contract law. Thus, for example, the ‘bargain theory’ of consideration58 has exercised a powerful influence on general contract theory and the conception of what is embraced by ‘contract’. Those who suggest59 that contract is more concerned with ‘injurious reliance’ than the enforcement of executory promises treat the two as mutually exclusive, whereas it may well be legitimate to conceive of various theories of contract explaining different forms of contract.60 The basic principles of contract law were laid down in an economic, social, political and intellectual context different, in important respects, from today’s. They were developed under the influence of the forces of individualism, competitiveness, laissez-faire, an intellectual climate characterised by a high regard for general principle (both moral and legal), and economic dominance of a free market economy. Atiyah has observed, ‘although freedom of contract is by no means dead in the law courts, even among lawyers the decline has been evident’.61 [page 12] In a small and beguiling American work,62 which the author describes as a ‘study in what might be called the process of doctrinal disintegration’,63 Professor Gilmore argued that the general theory of the law of contract was an artificial construct derived by 19th century law teachers and judges rather than something truly to be found in the reasons for decision in the major contract cases from which they drew support. In a passage characteristic of his style, Gilmore observed:64 The instinctive hope of the great system-builders was, no doubt, that the future development of the law could be, if not controlled, at least channelled in an orderly and rational fashion. That hope has proved, in our century of war and revolution, delusive. The systems have come unstuck and we see, presently, no way of glueing them back together again. But it is possible to learn as much from a failed experiment as from a successful one. Our observations of how the general theory of contract was put together and how it fell apart may stand us in good stead when next we feel ourselves in a mood to build something.
Gilmore concludes by speculating that the death of classical contract theory which he accepts has occurred, may herald a new theory. Atiyah also concludes his study by suggesting that ‘the time is plainly right for a new theoretical
structure for contract, which will place it more firmly in association with the rest of the law of obligations’.65 It would be a mistake to see the modern institution of contract as based exclusively, or even perhaps mainly, on a laissez-faire philosophy derived from the 19th century.66 There is undoubtedly a tension between classical contract theory and the reality of contract bargaining. Take, for example, the legal principle that a promise freely made should be performed.67 This is no more than an expression of a basic moral presumption that if you make a promise you should keep it.68 The legal tension which arises when the enforcement of the promise will cause hardship is no more than a manifestation of the moral dilemma which arises when the promise is found to be improvident. It is trite to say that the courts are not insensitive to the need to make the law produce just solutions. We have seen that many traditional assumptions of contract law are, in the modern world, subject to qualifications. Not only does the law give content to the word ‘freely’,69 but there are also qualifications to the [page 13] proposition that a promise freely made should be performed.70 Indeed, although Australian law has been slow in developing the concept, a concept of good faith in contract is now beginning to emerge.71 The fact that the law is now more generous (or flexible) in defining qualifications than under ‘classical’ theory is no more than a reflection of the changes in society’s perception of the strength of the moral presumption.72 Courts, being generally on the conservative side, have simply been slower in responding than most members of the community would have liked and this has led to legislative intervention.73 It is more difficult today than in the past to see contract law as a coherent whole for four reasons: the courts have become more pragmatic in their decisions; legislation usually operates by qualifying, rather than redefining, existing legal principles; contract law today is more complex than in the 19th century; and principles cannot be formulated solely from a commercial perspective: the law of contract is more general than that.
The Role of Contract Law [1-14] Consistency and certainty.74 Consistency and certainty in the law are not merely an indulgence for the benefit of lawyers and law students: they are essential to confident planning for the future by all. But what must be acknowledged is something which the lawyer, steeped in doctrine, has not always been prepared to recognise, namely, that doctrine is formed not in a vacuum but in response to particular problems in time and space. Similarly, the future viability of legal doctrine depends on considerations extrinsic to the system of doctrine itself, in general its capacity to provide just and efficient solutions to contemporary disputes. [1-15] Dispute resolution. The study of contract law is principally a study of legal decisions. Yet, the role of contract law in determining the resolution of contractual disputes can be overestimated. The cost and delay involved in litigation are considerable, notwithstanding persistent attempts to reduce both. Arbitration, as an alternative, has often proved to be even more expensive and time consuming.75 Both also involve considerable indirect and non-financial costs; for example, expenditure of the parties’ [page 14] own time and energy in preparing for trial, and the worry and mental strain imposed on the litigants and their witnesses. These problems would not disappear if our adversarial system of litigation were to be abandoned in favour of an inquisitional model. But the law now encourages (by institutional means) the conciliation process as part of ‘alternative’ dispute resolution processes. These conspire or should conspire to make resort to the courts and to arbitration a last resort. Yet it is the ordinary courts (and, to a lesser extent, arbitration) that give life, power and practical significance to the general principles of contract law in society. As well as reducing the role played by the general principles of contract law by its incursions into the substantive law,76 parliament has established various tribunals, commissions, boards and committees with jurisdiction to hear and determine particular classes of contractual or contract-related disputes. Examples are industrial tribunals in relation to employment disputes, and consumer
tribunals in relation to disputes arising out of the supply of goods or services (particularly credit) by traders to consumers. A number of reasons for this development can be cited. They include: that a just solution is more likely to emanate from persons having specialist expertise and experience than from those expert in abstract legal principles; that the amount at stake does not warrant the exhaustive factual and legal exploration to which adversaries before the ordinary courts are entitled; and that there is a public interest in the ascertainment of the truth and the resolution of certain classes of contractual or contract-related disputes which is inhibited by the ordinary courts’ application of the technical rules of evidence and procedure. It should be noted that many of the recent attempts to devise procedures to avoid the need to resort to litigation themselves involve contracts. Thus, where parties to a contractual dispute agree to use a mediator to assist the resolution, the procedure is itself a contractual one. [1-16] The commercial decision-making process. There is little empirical research into the extent to which contract law plays a role in the commercial decision-making process. What evidence there is suggests that business people are prone to make contracts and to solve contractual disputes without reference or with minimal reference to the applicable legal principles.77 There are various reasons for this phenomenon, including: ignorance; [page 15] sheer pressure of day-to-day business makes formality and explicitness in contracting an unwelcome burden; insistence on such formality and explicitness offends by suggesting distrust; the possible need of business people in dispute to have commercial dealings and relations with each other in the future; distrust of lawyers or a perception that they charge too much; the fact that when negotiating a settlement disputants are in control of both the direct result and its foreseeable consequences whereas litigation is nothing if
not uncertain; the possibility of disclosure, either to the other party or to the public of facts which a disputant would prefer to have remain private; that litigating itself, irrespective of the result, may damage one’s commercial reputation by suggesting that the litigant is not ‘realistic’ or ‘commercial’; and a perception by the disputant and by others that inability to settle is a mark of failure and defeat. Nevertheless, in the day-to-day activities of any business the law is there, giving to every action a legal consequence. The presumption is that an agreement which satisfies the law’s requirements is legally binding as a contract.78 Business people who are informed on the law of contract may in fact be in a much better position to make decisions, or to understand the consequences of their own decisions than those with whom they contract. The fact that it is rare79 for parties to reach agreements binding only ‘in honour’ is itself an indication that commercial people respect the legal sanctions provided by contract law. Although no one would suggest that we should abandon contract theory because business people do not make it their business to determine how they are affected, a strong argument can be made for making it simpler and more accessible. That is one function of this and other books, particularly those80 which are pitched at an audience which is more concerned with the basic applications of the law than detailed analysis of legal principle. It is also a justification for the creation of alternative dispute resolution procedures. Practising and academic lawyers of today must see contract law for what it is: one means of resolving questions and disputes arising from broken agreements.81 Its content is not inevitable and immutable, and its future [page 16] depends on its economic and social environment as well as on factors intrinsic to the legal system and its personnel.82 As Professor Coote83 states: Contract remains alive at common law and its retention can be justified so long as the balance of advantage to society remains with providing a facility by which parties are able to take legal contractual obligations upon themselves.
Australian Contract Law [1-17] The ‘flavour’ of Australian contract law. Australian contract law is derived from English law. However, English decisions (unless already adopted) are no longer binding on Australian courts. It is now possible, in the case of the High Court, to refer to a century of case law. It would be surprising if this did not produce an Australian slant to our contract law. The fact that Australian social and legal culture differs from those of other countries itself implies that our contract jurisprudence will have distinctive features. It is therefore appropriate to speak of an ‘Australian law of contract’.84 The first step in identifying the ‘flavour’ of Australian contract law involves an appreciation of the nature of the cases in which those principles have been applied.85 Given the traditional rural basis of the economy, and the importance attached by Australian people to home ownership, it is to be expected that by far the most common type of contract to have come before the Australian courts is the sale of land contract. Until quite recently,86 nearly all the leading High Court cases in contract were decisions on that type of contract. In this respect there is a contrast with English law, which is based mainly on commercial contracts of arbitration, insurance, charterparty and sale of goods. This is a reflection of the role of London as a centre for contract dispute resolution in Europe, even where the contract does not involve residents of the United Kingdom.87 The discussion in this book of recent decisions concentrates on Australian cases, and the main relevance of English cases lies in giving an account of commercial contracts. [page 17] The second step is an acknowledgment of the role which statute now plays in Australian contract law. Although there is no statute codifying contract law,88 the legislation is extensive. Much of this, such as statutes which regulate bills of exchange, marine insurance, partnership and commercial sale of goods contracts, is derived from English statutes. On the other hand, consumer protection legislation is more extensive in Australia than in many other countries.89 In particular, the statutory prohibition on conduct in trade or commerce that is misleading or deceptive or is likely to mislead or deceive90 has created a norm of conduct having considerable impact on contract law. Although the legislation includes remedial provisions which operate in conjunction with contract
principles, the impact is in many cases to displace those principles.91 [1-18] Innovation by the High Court. The third step involves an appreciation of a feature to which Sir Anthony Mason drew attention when writing in the first issue of the Journal of Contract Law. Referring to the break with the English legal system,92 and the innovative approach of many recent High Court decisions, he said that the law of contract has recently awoken from a ‘long slumber’.93 Arguably, only in the last 20 years have the High Court’s judgments in contract been truly ‘innovative’. Thus, the first edition of this book referred to several cases of the early 1980s in which the court showed itself to be willing to mould old doctrine to suit the needs of current social and legal conditions.94 It was noted that these cases all involved sale of land transactions, and the point was made that the innovation was for the most part couched in terms of equitable principle rather than common law.95 In drawing attention in the second edition to subsequent innovations96 it was noted that the decisions were more [page 18] concerned with ordinary commercial contracts than land transactions, and not driven exclusively by a desire to promote equitable principles. Since publication of the second edition there have been relatively few High Court decisions significantly affecting the core of contract law, and it is not possible to discern an overriding concern. The period has been one of consolidation rather than innovation,97 particularly in the contexts of discharge for breach,98 contract damages,99 implied terms100 and contract interpretation.101 The equitable principles have been further refined.102 In addition, however, there have been decisions which, although not strictly contractual in nature, have a significant impact on contract law, particularly in the contexts of restitution103 and the trade practices legislation,104 now the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth).105 [1-19] Modernising and internationalising contract law. There are many decisions, in which the High Court, while not exactly being [page 19]
innovative, has modernised contract law.106 This process is also (perhaps more so) apparent in the decisions of the State Supreme Courts and the Federal Court, for example, in recognising the role of good faith in contract law.107 Although space does not permit particular cases to be highlighted here, they are discussed throughout the book.108 It is frequently difficult to discern whether Australian law is diverging from English law in the formulation of principle rather than (as the traditional contrast between sale of land and commercial contracts would suggest) in the application of common principles.109 It is also true that judges of the High Court have enjoyed high regard as expositors of the law of contract, and their contract judgments have often been cited in the courts of England and other Commonwealth countries. Australian cases therefore sometimes form the basis for changes in the law of other jurisdictions. An extremely important example110 of this has arisen in the law of restitution, where the High Court’s decision in Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul111 to adopt unjust enrichment was followed in England.112 While it might be objected that Pavey & Matthews was not a decision applying contract principles, the adoption was symptomatic of what is arguably the most significant development in the past decade. This development might be termed the ‘internationalisation’ of the common law, including contract law in Australia113 and the United States.114 [1-20] International sales of goods. The development referred to above has been reinforced (or hastened) by the adoption115 of the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods 1980.116 This Convention (often referred to as the Vienna Convention or CISG) entered into force in Australia on 1 April 1989. As its name implies, the Convention applies to certain contracts for the international sale of [page 20] goods.117 The Convention governs only the formation of the contract of sale and the rights and obligations of the seller and the buyer arising from such a contract.118 Far from being dead, contract law appears to be entering a stage where there is a high degree of common principle between common law jurisdictions such as
Australia,119 and also to some extent between these jurisdictions and those which otherwise operate under civil law principles. The development also militates against the view that a distinctively Australian contract law is being formulated. It is beyond the scope of this work to discuss the Convention. Although some of the rules of the Convention differ in important respects from those applicable to domestic sale of goods contracts — for example, in relation to the revocation of offers120 and the termination of contracts for breach121 — it is to be expected that because the Convention operates in conjunction with Australian contract law it may lead to a reconsideration of some aspects of our (domestic) law.122
The Australian Consumer Law [1-21] Derivation. Since the preparation of the previous edition, the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) has been renamed the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth).123 The most important feature of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) was the creation of the Australian Consumer [page 21] Law, which is set out in Sch 2 to the Act. Most of the consumer protection provisions of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) were in fact placed in the Australian Consumer Law. The Trade Practices Act was generally drafted with reference to the conduct and contracts of ‘corporations’. Because the Australian Consumer Law was drafted for adoption by State and Territory legislation,124 it refers, more generally, to the conduct and contracts of ‘persons’. [1-22] Content. In summary, relevant aspects of the Australian Consumer Law include: an unfair contract terms regime; a consumer guarantees regime; a national product safety regime; provisions relating to layby agreements; provisions relating to unsolicited consumer agreements; and provisions stating various categories of prohibited conduct, including the
prohibitions on misleading or deceptive conduct and unconscionable conduct. Much of the above is substantially based on provisions in the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth). But because many of the consumer protection provisions which were formerly contained in the Trade Practices Act have been moved to the Australian Consumer Law, the section numbers of those provisions have changed. For example, the prohibition on misleading or deceptive conduct which was formerly stated in s 52 of the Trade Practices Act, has been moved to s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law. In addition, some provisions have not only been moved, they have also been redrafted. For the purposes of this work, the most important are those relating to remedies for contravention of the Australian Consumer Law.125 The two new aspects of the Australian Consumer Law which are most relevant to this work are: (1) the consumer guarantees regime (replacing the implied conditions and warranties regime of the Trade Practices Act);126 and (2) the unfair contract terms regime.127 1.
Cf Brian Coote, ‘The Essence of Contract — Part II’ (1989) 1 JCL 183 at 183–90; and see generally R S Summers, ‘Theory, Formality and Practical Legal Criticism’ (1990) 106 LQR 407.
2.
[1-13], [1-15]–[1-16].
3.
For detailed accounts see, eg Fifoot, History and Sources of the Common Law, 1949, pp 217ff; Simpson, A History of the Common Law of Contract, 1975.
4.
See Maitland, The Forms of Action at Common Law, ed, Chaytor and Whittaker, 1936.
5.
See J H Baker, ‘New Light on Slade’s Case’ [1971] CLJ 51, 213; David Ibbetson, ‘Sixteenth Century Contract Law: Slade’s Case in Context’ (1984) 4 OJLS 295.
6.
(1602) 4 Co Rep 91a; 76 ER 1074.
7.
See also [6-03].
8.
See generally Chapter 38. But see Atiyah, Essays on Contract, 1986, p 54.
9.
(1987) 162 CLR 221; 69 ALR 577 (see [9-20], [38-08]).
10.
See further David Ibbetson, ‘Implied Contracts and Restitution: History in the High Court of Australia’ (1988) 8 OJLS 312.
11.
See Healing Sales Pty Ltd v Inglis Electrix Pty Ltd (1968) 121 CLR 584. For discussion of the early history see Street, Foundations of Legal Liability, 1906, Vol I, pp 374ff; Simpson, A History of the Common Law of Contract, 1975, pp 240–7, 535–7.
12.
Cf Strangborough v Warner (1589) 4 Leon 3; 74 ER 686.
13.
See further [6-09].
14.
See Air Great Lakes Pty Ltd v K S Easter (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 309 at 335.
15.
[1976] QB 44 (approved Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar Hansen-Tangen [1976] 1 WLR 989 at
998). 16.
[1976] QB 44 at 71.
17.
See Keith Mason, ‘Contract and Tort: Looking Across the Boundary from the Side of Contract’ (1987) 61 ALJ 228.
18.
[1964] AC 465. See further [18-29]–[18-36].
19.
On the idea that Hedley Byrne liability is ‘equivalent to contract’ see, eg Hill (t/as R F Hill & Associates) v Van Erp (1997) 188 CLR 159 at 233.
20.
See [18-30].
21.
See, eg [18-36].
22.
Cf Jane Swanton, ‘The Convergence of Tort and Contract’ (1989) 12 Syd LR 40.
23.
See Astley v Austrust Ltd (1999) 197 CLR 1; 161 ALR 155 (apportionment legislation — but see now [35-30]).
24.
See [7-01]–[7-23] (promissory estoppel).
25.
See further [38-02].
26.
On the relationship between contract, tort and restitution see Mason and Carter, Restitution Law in Australia, 1995, paras 310–317.
27.
Biotechnology Australia Pty Ltd v Pace (1988) 15 NSWLR 130 at 133 per Kirby P.
28.
See also [1-16].
29.
And the perspective on commercial behaviour is often that of 19th century methods of contracting. See, eg [3-03] (limitations on traditional approach to agreement), and further [1-13].
30.
And see [1-15].
31.
Cf [9-12].
32.
See generally [24-15]–[24-32].
33.
See generally [11-12]–[11-24].
34.
See, eg Balfour v Balfour [1919] 2 KB 571 (see [8-03]). Cf Jones v Padavatton [1969] 2 All ER 616 (see [8-03]).
35.
See [1-11].
36.
Recent illustrations include Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society [1998] 1 WLR 896; Toll (FGCT) Pty Ltd v Alphapharm Pty Ltd (2004) 219 CLR 165; 211 ALR 342.
37.
(1983) 151 CLR 422 at 429; 45 ALR 265. See also Toll (FGCT) Pty Ltd v Alphapharm Pty Ltd (2004) 219 CLR 165 at 179–80.
38.
Air Great Lakes Pty Ltd v K S Easter (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 309 at 335.
39.
(1871) LR 6 QB 597 at 607.
40.
See Taylor v Johnson (1983) 151 CLR 422 at 428. See generally on estoppel [7-10]–[7-23].
41.
See further [20-38]–[20-54].
42.
[1983] 1 AC 854.
43.
[1983] 1 AC 854 at 917. See also Babsari Pty Ltd v Wong [2000] 2 Qd R 576 at 584.
44.
(1985) 2 NSWLR 309 at 336. But see Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Ranson (1989) 90 ALR 533 at 535–6.
45.
See also [31-12].
46.
See [3-29].
47.
[1983] 1 AC 854 at 916–17. Cf at 914, 924. Cf Air Great Lakes Pty Ltd v K S Easter (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 309 at 330–1; Finucane v New South Wales Egg Corp (1988) 80 ALR 486 at 521 (subjective intention a ‘factor’).
48.
See further [3-29].
49.
See Allied Marine Transport Ltd v Vale do Rio Doce Navegacao SA [1985] 1 WLR 925 at 936–7 (see J Beatson (1986) 102 LQR 19; M J Lawson [1988] LMCLQ 302).
50.
Cf Anne De Moor, ‘Intention in the Law of Contract: Elusive or Illusory’ (1990) 106 LQR 632. For a suggestion of a third — promisor objectivity — see William Howarth, ‘The Meaning of Objectivity in Contract’ (1984) 100 LQR 265. This possibility was left open by McHugh JA in Air Great Lakes Pty Ltd v K S Easter (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 309 at 336.
51.
See, eg Esanda Ltd v Burgess [1984] 2 NSWLR 139 at 146; Biotechnology Australia Pty Ltd v Pace (1988) 15 NSWLR 130 at 153.
52.
See, eg Allied Marine Transport Ltd v Vale do Rio Doce Navegacao SA [1985] 1 WLR 925 at 936. Cf Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp (1984) 156 CLR 41 at 62; 55 ALR 417.
53.
See J R Spencer, ‘Signature, Consent, and the Rule in L’Estrange v Graucob’ [1973] CLJ 104. Cf Esther Stern, ‘Objectivity, Legal Doctrine and the Law of Mistaken Identity’ (1995) 8 JCL 154.
54.
[1983] 1 AC 854.
55.
[1983] 1 AC 854 at 915. The word ‘reasonably’ should precede the word ‘understood’ to make the statement more comprehensive (see P S Atiyah, ‘The Hannah Blumenthal and Classical Contract Law’ (1986) 102 LQR 363 at 366).
56.
See also [1-11].
57.
For discussion see, eg Brian Coote, ‘The Essence of Contract’ (1988–89) 1 JCL 91 and 183; R A Hillman, ‘The Crisis in Modern Contract Theory’ (1988) 67 Texas Law Review 62. For an analysis from the critical studies perspective see Peter Drahos and Stephen Parker, ‘Critical Contract Law in Australia’ (1990) 3 JCL 31.
58.
See [6-09].
59.
Cf P S Atiyah, ‘Contracts, Promises and the Law of Obligations’ (1978) 94 LQR 193.
60.
Cf Ian R Macniel, ‘Efficient Breach of Contract: Circles in the Sky’ (1982) 68 Virginia Law Review 947; Samuel Stoljar, ‘Enforcing Benevolent Promises’ (1989) 12 Syd LR 17 especially at 31, 35; Brian Coote, ‘The Essence of Contract — Part II’ (1989) 1 JCL 183 at 190–1, 201–3; Richard Austen-Baker, ‘A Relational Law of Contract’ (2004) 20 JCL 125; Nick Sage, ‘Should Contract Law Demand Equality in Exchange? Reflections on Substance, Procedure and a Modus Vivendi’ (2008) 24 JCL 28.
61.
The Rise and Fall of Freedom of Contract, 1979, p 716.
62.
The Death of Contract, 1974. See R E Speidel, ‘An Essay on the Reported Death and Continued Vitality of Contract’ (1975) 27 Stanford LR 1161; Richard Austen-Baker, ‘Gilmore and the Strange Case of the Failure of Contract to Die After All’ (2002) 18 JCL 1.
63.
The Death of Contract, 1974, p 101.
64.
The Death of Contract, 1974, p 102.
65.
The Rise and Fall of Freedom of Contract, 1979, p 778.
66.
Cf Air Great Lakes Pty Ltd v K S Easter (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 309 at 338.
67.
See, eg Moschi v Lep Air Services Ltd [1973] AC 331 at 346; The Hansa Nord [1976] QB 44 at 71; Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711 at 715; Ankar Pty Ltd v National Westminster Finance (Australia) Ltd (1987) 162 CLR 549 at 556–7; 70 ALR 641.
68.
See Rawls, A Theory of Justice, 1973, p 342. Cf Atiyah, The Rise and Fall of Freedom of Contract, 1979, p 431. For a more general approach see Fried, Contract as Promise, 1981. See also F H Easterbrook, ‘The Inevitability of Law and Economics’ (1989) 1 Legal Educ Rev 1.
69.
See, eg [18-63] (fraud), [20-06] (mistake), Chapter 22 (duress), Chapter 23 (undue influence) and [24-12] (unconscionability).
70.
See, eg [14-04] (interpretation of exclusion clauses), [25-06] (public policy) and [37-07] (penalty clauses).
71.
See Peden, Good Faith in the Performance of Contracts, 2003 and generally Chapter 2.
72.
Cf Andrew Phang, ‘Security of Contract and the Pursuit of Fairness’ (2000) 16 JCL 120.
73.
See [1-09].
74.
Cf Treitel, Doctrine and Discretion in the Law of Contract, 1981.
75.
But improvements have been made; see ACT: Commercial Arbitration Act 1986; NSW: Commercial Arbitration Act 2010; NT: Commercial Arbitration (National Uniform Legislation) Act 2011; Qld: Commercial Arbitration Act 1990; SA: Commercial Arbitration Act 2011; Tas: Commercial Arbitration Act 1986; Vic: Commercial Arbitration Act 1986; WA: Commercial Arbitration Act 1985.
76.
See [1-09].
77.
See, eg H Beale and T Dugdale, ‘Contracts between Businessmen; Planning and the Use of Contractual Remedies’ (1975) 2 Brit J Law & Soc 18; Stewart Macaulay, ‘Elegant Models, Empirical Pictures and the Complexities of Contract’ (1977) 11 Law and Society Rev 507; Yates, Exclusion Clauses in Contracts, 2nd ed, 1982, Ch 1; John Gava and Janey Greene, ‘Do We Need a Hybrid Law of Contract? Why Hugh Collins is Wrong and Why it Matters’ [2004] CLJ 605.
78.
See [8-05].
79.
See, eg Orion Insurance Co Plc v Sphere Drake Insurance Plc [1992] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 239.
80.
See, eg Carter, Carter’s Guide to Australian Contract Law, 2nd ed, 2011.
81.
For an analysis of the role of contract theory in the provision of advice by practising lawyers see John Swan, ‘Party Autonomy and Judicial Intervention: The Impact of Fairness in Commercial Contracts’ (1994) 7 JCL 1. Cf John Gava and Peter Kincaid, ‘Contract and Conventionalism: Professional Attitudes to Changes in the Law of Contract in Australia’ (1996) 10 JCL 141.
82.
See Roger Brownsword, ‘Introduction’ in Furmston, ed, The Law of Contract, 4th ed, 2010, Ch 1.
83.
Brian Coote, ‘The Essence of Contract — Part II’ (1989) 1 JCL 183 at 201. See also J W Carter, ‘Contract, Restitution and Promissory Estoppel’ (1989) 12 UNSWLJ 30 at 31, 58; Sir Gerard Brennan, ‘Opening Address [to the First Journal of Contract Law Conference]’ (1990) 3 JCL 85.
84.
For a more radical approach see M P Ellinghaus, ‘An Australian Contract Law?’ (1989) 2 JCL 13. Contrast John Gava, ‘An Australian Contract Law?—A Reply’ (1998) 12 JCL 242.
85.
See further J W Carter and Andrew Stewart, ‘Commerce and Conscience: The High Court’s Developing View of Contract’ (1993) 23 UWALR 49.
86.
See [1-18].
87.
See Lord Goff, ‘Opening Address [to the Second Journal of Contract Law Conference]’ (1992) 5 JCL 1.
88.
For discussion see F M B Reynolds, ‘Contract: Codification, Legislation and Judicial Development’
(1995) 9 JCL 11; S M Waddams, ‘Codification, Law Reform and Judicial Development’ (1996) 9 JCL 192; Dame Mary Arden, ‘Time for an English Commercial Code?’ [1997] CLJ 516. In New Zealand several important areas of contract law are regulated by statutes, enacted not as an ‘enduring code, so much as a liberating device’ (Richard Sutton, ‘Commentary on “Codification, Law Reform and Judicial Development”’ (1996) 9 JCL 200 at 201). 89.
For a general review see L J Priestley, ‘Contract — The Burgeoning Maelstrom’ (1988) 1 JCL 15.
90.
See Chapter 18.
91.
See generally David Harland, ‘The Statutory Prohibition on Misleading or Deceptive Conduct in Australia and its Impact on the Law of Contract’ (1995) 111 LQR 100. Cf Nicholas Seddon, ‘Australian Contract Law: Maelstrom or Measured Mutation?’ (1994) 7 JCL 93.
92.
See Sir Anthony Mason, ‘Australian Contract Law’ (1988) 1 JCL 1.
93.
See Sir Anthony Mason, Book Review (1989) 1 JCL 265.
94.
These were: Meehan v Jones (1982) 149 CLR 571; 42 ALR 463 (see [5-02]); Taylor v Johnson (1983) 151 CLR 422; 45 ALR 265 (see [20-54]); Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v Amadio (1983) 151 CLR 447; 46 ALR 402 (see [24-12]); Legione v Hateley (1983) 152 CLR 406; 46 ALR 1 (see [709], [31-13]).
95.
See Anthony Mason, ‘The Place of Equity and Equitable Remedies in the Contemporary Common Law World’ (1994) 110 LQR 238.
96.
Reference was made to: Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul (1987) 162 CLR 221 (see [9-20], [38-08]); Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher (1988) 164 CLR 387; 76 ALR 513 (see [7-12]); Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd (1988) 165 CLR 107; 80 ALR 574 (see [16-18]); Hungerfords v Walker (1989) 171 CLR 125; 84 ALR 119 (see [36-07]).
97.
See generally Andrew Stewart and J W Carter, ‘The High Court and Contract Law in the New Millennium’ (2003) 6 Flinders Journal of Law Reform 185.
98.
See Koompahtoo Local Aboriginal Land Council v Sanpine Pty Ltd (2007) 233 CLR 115; 241 ALR 88; [2007] HCA 61.
99.
See Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64; 104 ALR 1 (see [3511]); Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1993) 176 CLR 344; 111 ALR 289 (see [36-09]); Astley v Austrust Ltd (1999) 197 CLR 1 (see [35-29]); Ringrow Pty Ltd v BP Australia Pty Ltd (2005) 224 CLR 656; 222 ALR 306; [2005] HCA 71 (see [37-12]); Gumland Property Holdings Pty Ltd v Duffy Bros Fruit Market (Campbelltown) Pty Ltd (2008) 234 CLR 237; 244 ALR 1; [2008] HCA 10; Tabcorp Holdings Ltd v Bowen Investments Pty Ltd (2009) 236 CLR 272; 253 ALR 1; [2009] HCA 8.
100. See Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd (1995) 185 CLR 410; 131 ALR 422; Breen v Williams (1996) 186 CLR 71; 138 ALR 259. 101. See Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust v South Sydney City Council (2002) 240 CLR 45; 186 ALR 289; Andar Transport Pty Ltd v Brambles Ltd (2004) 217 CLR 424; 206 ALR 387; Pacific Carriers Ltd v BNP Paribas (2004) 218 CLR 451; 208 ALR 213; Equuscorp Pty Ltd v Glengallan Investments Pty Ltd (2004) 218 CLR 472; 211 ALR 101; Toll (FGCT) Pty Ltd v Alphapharm Pty Ltd (2004) 219 CLR 165; Agricultural and Rural Finance Pty Ltd v Gardiner (2008) 238 CLR 570; 251 ALR 322; [2008] HCA 57. 102. See Louth v Diprose (1992) 175 CLR 621; 110 ALR 1 (undue influence and unconscionable conduct in relation to gift); Garcia v National Australia Bank Ltd (1998) 194 CLR 395; 155 ALR 614 (undue influence); Bridgewater v Leahy (1998) 194 CLR 457; 158 ALR 66 (unconscionable conduct); Giumelli v Giumelli (1999) 196 CLR 101; 161 ALR 473 (promissory estoppel); Tanwar Enterprises Pty Ltd v Cauchi (2003) 217 CLR 315; 201 ALR 359 (relief from forfeiture).
103. See, eg David Securities Pty Ltd v Commonwealth Bank of Australia (1992) 175 CLR 353 (restitution of money paid under mistake of law); Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1993) 176 CLR 344 (total failure of consideration); Roxborough v Rothmans of Pall Mall Australia Ltd (2001) 208 CLR 516; 185 ALR 335 (partial failure of consideration); Lumbers v W Cook Builders Pty Ltd (in liq) (2008) 232 CLR 635; 247 ALR 412; [2008] HCA 27 (quantum meruit). 104. See, eg Wardley Australia Ltd v State of Western Australia (1992) 175 CLR 514; 109 ALR 247 (limitation of actions); Webb Distributors (Aust) Pty Ltd v State of Victoria (1993) 179 CLR 15; 117 ALR 321 (approach to discretionary jurisdiction — see [19-17]); Sellars v Adelaide Petroleum NL (1994) 179 CLR 332; 120 ALR 16 (assessment of damages); Marks (in a Representative Capacity) v GIO Australia Holdings Ltd (1998) 196 CLR 494; 158 ALR 333 (assessment of damages — see[1914]); Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v C G Berbatis Holdings Pty Ltd (2003) 214 CLR 51; 197 ALR 153 (unconscionable conduct). 105. The relevant provisions are in the Australian Consumer Law. See [1-21]–[1-22]. 106. See, eg Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337; 41 ALR 367 (see [11-10], [12-13], [33-17]); Ankar Pty Ltd v National Westminster Finance (Australia) Ltd (1987) 162 CLR 549 (see [30-18]); Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385; 88 ALR 413 (see [30-42]). 107. See generally Chapter 2. 108. As to the role of intermediate courts of appeal in developing the common law, see Farah Constructions Pty Ltd v Say-Dee Pty Ltd (2006) 230 CLR 89; 236 ALR 209; [2007] HCA 22. 109. Thus, with Legione v Hateley (1983) 152 CLR 406 may be contrasted Scandinavian Trading Tanker Co AB v Flota Petrolera Ecuatoriana [1983] 2 AC 694 (see [31-13]) in which there was no relief from the ‘forfeiture’ produced by exercise of a contractual right to terminate. But see Tanwar Enterprises Pty Ltd v Cauchi (2003) 217 CLR 315 ([31-13]). Contrast Darlington Futures Ltd v Delco Australia Pty Ltd (1986) 161 CLR 500; 68 ALR 385 where the High Court had occasion to disagree with the English approach to limitation clauses in contracts; see [14-05]. 110. For another illustration see Behzadi v Shaftesbury Hotels Ltd [1992] Ch 1. 111. (1987) 162 CLR 221 (see [9-20], [38-08]). 112. See Lipkin Gorman v Karpnale Ltd [1991] 2 AC 548. 113. See Sir Anthony Mason, ‘Changing the Law in a Changing Society’ (1993) 67 ALJ 568, especially at 570–3; Lord Oliver of Aylmerton, ‘Requiem for the Common Law?’ (1993) 67 ALJ 675, especially at 686–7. 114. See L J Priestley, ‘A Guide to a Comparison of Australian and United States Contract Law’ (1989) 12 UNSWLJ 4; R J Mooney, ‘Hands Across the Water: The Continuing Convergence of American and Australian Contract Law’ (2000) 23 UNSWLJ 1. Cf J W Carter, ‘Article 2B: International Perspectives’ (1999) 14 JCL 54. 115. See ACT: Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1987: NSW: Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1986; NT: Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1987; Qld: Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1986; SA: Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1986; Tas: Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1987; Vic: Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1987; WA: Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1986. See also Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), s 68. 116. See also the UNIDROIT Principles for International Commercial Contracts, 2010, which, although not having the force of law, provide a facility for the adoption of common principles to govern contracts between parties who operate under different systems of law. See M P Furmston, ‘Unidroit Principles for International Commercial Contracts’ (1996) 10 JCL 11; Roy Goode, ‘International Restatements of Contract and English Law’ [1997] Uniform Law Review 231; M J Bonell, ‘The CISG, European Contract Law and the Development of a World Contract Law’ (2008) 56 American
Journal of Comparative Law 1. 117. The Convention applies to contracts of sale of goods between parties whose places of business are in different States: if the States are Contracting States; or if the rules of private international law lead to the application of the law of a Contracting State: Art 1(1). 118. See Art 4. 119. It is perhaps unfortunate that the United Kingdom has not yet adopted the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods 1980. See Johan Steyn, ‘The Vienna Convention: A Kind of Esperanto’, in Birks, ed, The Frontiers of Liability, 1994, Vol 2, p 12. 120. See Art 14 (offer cannot be revoked if it indicates that it is irrevocable). Contrast the rules discussed [3-35], [3-43], [3-47]. 121. See J W Carter, ‘Party Autonomy and Statutory Regulation: Sale of Goods’ (1993) 6 JCL 93. 122. See H O Hunter and J W Carter, ‘Is Commercial Law Becoming a World Law?’ (1996) 2 NZBLQ 161. 123. See J W Carter, ‘The Commercial Side of Australian Consumer Protection Law’ (2010) 26 JCL 221. 124. See, eg Fair Trading Amendment (Australian Consumer Law) Act 2010 (NSW), which adopted the Australian Consumer Law as a law of New South Wales. It is set out in Pt 3 of the Fair Trading Act 1987 (NSW). The law as so applying is referred to as the ‘Australian Consumer Law (NSW)’. For other legislation see Carter on Contract, §ACL-020. 125. See Chapter 19. 126. See Chapter 11. 127. See Chapter 24.
[page 22]
Chapter 2
Good Faith and Commercial Construction [2-01] Introduction. Good faith is inherent in all common law contract principles, and any attempt to imply an independent term requiring good faith is unnecessary and a retrograde step. This chapter explains the meaning of ‘good faith’, which requires a sophisticated understanding of the meaning of ‘honesty’. The operation of good faith in different contexts is also outlined.1
Some General Points [2-02] Introduction. Australian contract law is rapidly moving towards three propositions. (1) In most contracts (perhaps all contracts) a requirement of good faith must be implied, at least in connection with termination pursuant to an express term of the contract, but perhaps more generally. (2) Where it is present, the source of the implied requirement of good faith is an implied term of the contract. (3) The implied requirement of good faith is satisfied by a party who has acted honestly and reasonably. Judicial support for these three propositions is found mainly in cases purporting to apply the decision of the New South Wales Court of Appeal in Renard Constructions (ME) Pty Ltd v Minister for Public Works.2 In Renard it was held that the ability of the principal under a building contract to rely on a show cause procedure was subject to requirements of reasonableness. Priestley JA said:3 The contract can in my opinion only be effective as a workable business document under which the promises of each party to the other may be fulfilled, if the sub-clause is read in the way I have
indicated, that is, as subject to requirements of reasonableness.
[page 23] It is because this requirement of reasonableness has in the subsequent cases been rationalised by reference to good faith that Australian courts have come to regard reasonableness as a key ingredient of good faith. There is also considerable support for a requirement of good faith (although not necessarily the element of reasonable conduct) in academic writings.4 This chapter will also show: that good faith need not be implied into contracts, because it is inherent in our law; rarely will there be the need for an implied term of good faith; and good faith requires honesty and not reasonableness or failure to engage in unconscionable conduct. [2-03] Good faith inherent in contract. Good faith is not an independent concept so much as something which is inherent in contract law itself and therefore a concept which must be taken into account when interpreting a contract, determining the scope of contractual rights and so on. Good faith informs all of contract law and if a particular rule or principle is not producing results which are consistent with our current understanding of good faith, then there is something wrong with the rule or principle. The most important device for ensuring that good faith considerations are upheld in the application of contract rules and principles to particular contracts is ‘commercial construction’.5 The cases rely heavily on the implication of a term of good faith, but the better approach is to give effect to the expressed intention of the parties. Properly applied, commercial construction will achieve a result which is consistent with the underlying requirement of good faith. It is, moreover, a technique that has been in use for some time. It usually makes recourse to term implication quite unnecessary.6 Although this is not simply a disagreement with methodology, the fact that the wrong methodology has been employed has led to the implication of a requirement of good faith having a content which is far too onerous and is, indeed, inconsistent with key features of contract itself.7 Every aspect of contract law is, or should be, consistent with good faith
because good faith is the essence of contract. On that basis, illustrations of [page 24] good faith in contract are infinite. Although it has sometimes been recognised that many rules of contract law give expression to ideas that can only be explained in terms of good faith,8 the implications of this may not have been fully understood or appreciated in the Australian cases. Various examples of the operation of good faith in parts of contract law doctrine are discussed below.
Role and Relevance [2-04] Good faith in contract formation.9 Where an offer is not supported by consideration it does not give rise to contractual obligations. It merely serves to confer a right on the offeree.10 The law of contract is not concerned to hold an offeror to an unaccepted offer. However, it is concerned to ensure that the offeror acts in good faith. So, the ability of an offeror to withdraw an offer at any time prior to acceptance is qualified by the requirement that the revocation be communicated, so that the revocation does not take effect until communicated, or at least until the offeree obtains knowledge of revocation from a reliable source.11 Because an offer does not create any legal obligations, it seems that good faith justifies the requirement that the revocation be communicated. Elementary considerations of honesty and fairness require that the right of revocation be qualified.12 Mention might be made of other rules, including the rule in Felthouse v Bindley.13 [2-05] Good faith and the implication of terms.14 We would not have a doctrine (or perhaps several doctrines) of implied terms if good faith were not an essential ingredient of contract law. How else could the concept of a term implied in law ever have evolved? The principal objective of that concept is to ensure that (subject to the parties’ agreement) there is a minimum level of obligation,15 or to complete an otherwise incomplete [page 25]
agreement by reference to what the parties, acting in good faith, are presumed to have intended. Of course, if an implied term of good faith is present in all contracts, in many of the cases in which a term has been implied in law,16 no implication was necessary because the good faith implication would have dealt with the matter. If good faith did involve a requirement of reasonableness the whole law of implied terms would be different: reasonableness (not necessity) would be a sufficient basis for implication.17 [2-06] Good faith and incorporation of terms.18 In the context of the incorporation of terms by notice it is well established that ‘reasonable’ notice must be given. It is now also clear that good faith is an appropriate test for determining the precise form or content of ‘reasonable notice’. The judgment of Bingham LJ in Interfoto Picture Library Ltd v Stiletto Visual Programmes Ltd19 is an illustration of the overt recognition of the role of good faith in this context. He said:20 The well-known cases on sufficiency of notice are … [at] one level … concerned with a question of pure contractual analysis, whether one party has done enough to give the other notice of the incorporation of a term in the contract. At another level they are concerned with a somewhat different question, whether it would in all the circumstances be fair (or reasonable) to hold a party bound by any conditions or by a particular condition of an unusual and stringent nature.
In the result — as an impact of good faith — the ‘more outlandish the clause the greater the notice which the other party’21 is entitled to receive. [2-07] Good faith and interpretation.22 The law of interpretation is at the very heart of contract law. Whatever else may be said about the modern approach to construction (‘commercial construction’), it is clear that it is concerned to ensure good faith. The modern rationalisation of the established fact that interpretation is an objective process is a concern to insulate each contracting party from the other’s subjective (but uncommunicated) intention. No concept other than good faith itself is needed to justify this approach. Again, while courts are concerned to adopt reasonable interpretations, and view with suspicion alleged interpretations which are objectively unreasonable, it is clear law that a ‘court has no jurisdiction to reject an interpretation, clearly intended by the parties, merely because it is in its view unreasonable or because it produces unreasonable results’.23 [page 26] [2-08] Good faith and vitiating factors.24 Much of the law of vitiating factors
is not strictly contract law, in that the definition of concepts such as ‘misrepresentation’ (or ‘misleading conduct’) and ‘unconscionable conduct’ does not depend on contractual principles. Nevertheless, because these are the concepts by reference to which parties are required to justify unilateral decisions to depart from a contract, and because good faith is the essence of contract, commonsense tells us that if one party has signalled bad faith by its conduct it is likely that the law will allow the innocent party to rescind the contract. So, the law on misrepresentation25 and some aspects of mistake26 clearly embody good faith. Significantly, however, the law of misrepresentation does not generally impose a positive obligation of disclosure, even though from the representee’s perspective that would be a ‘reasonable’ approach. In other words, good faith requires a party to act honestly (which includes ensuring that representations are accurate), but it falls short of requiring a party to volunteer information for the benefit of the other party, whether or not this would be to their own disadvantage. It is for that reason that the duty of disclosure in the context of fiduciaries and insurance proposals is termed a duty of ‘utmost’ good faith. It is the epithet ‘utmost’ (not good faith) which distinguishes the position of a person who seeks insurance cover from that of others who negotiate contracts. Indeed, unless some specific content is given to ‘utmost’, implication of a requirement of good faith in the performance of all contracts must, in effect, assimilate all contracts with contracts of insurance.27 [2-09] Good faith and frustration.28 Cases of frustration give effect to a community concern that parties should not be required to perform ‘come hell or high water’. Instead, good faith requires that the parties’ obligations should be interpreted by reference to realities. There is, therefore, a ‘default rule’ under which the parties to a contract are discharged if the requirements set out in Lord Radcliffe’s classic statement of principle in Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham Urban District Council29 are satisfied. Whether this principle of frustration is termed ‘construction’, the operation of a ‘constructive condition’30 or based on some other theory does not matter: at the end of the day the ultimate rationale is good faith. Thus, in a passage which immediately precedes his statement in Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham Urban District Council,31 Lord Radcliffe, having canvassed the various explanations for frustration to be found in the earlier cases, said:32 [page 27]
By this time it might seem that the parties themselves have become so far disembodied spirits that their actual persons should be allowed to rest in peace. In their place there rises the figure of the fair and reasonable man. And the spokesman of the fair and reasonable man, who represents after all no more than the anthropomorphic conception of justice, is and must be the court itself.
‘Frustration’, as a concept, is a judicial construct designed to prevent injustice. Expressed in terms of good faith, good faith requires each party to respect the substance of the bargain struck and neither can call upon the other to perform in circumstances which are ‘radically different’ from those contemplated by the parties in their bargain. [2-10] Good faith and contract remedies.33 It is obvious that the rule in Hadley v Baxendale,34 because it is rooted in the ‘contemplation’ of the parties, is a limitation on damages recovery that is based on good faith. That is particularly true of the second limb of the rule, namely, that a party may recover such damages ‘as may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of both parties, at the time they made the contract, as the probable result of the breach of it’. Courts have interpreted this as requiring communication of special circumstances. In other words, a party who wishes to recover in respect of an unusual loss must (at least) have communicated the risk that the loss would be sustained prior to entry into the contract, because good faith implies that a party should be given the opportunity to decline to contract on that basis. Another illustration is the concept of mitigation.35 The idea that a party should not be entitled to recover increases in its loss or damage attributable to ‘unreasonable’ conduct gives effect to good faith, and the placement of the onus of proof reflects the basic tenet that good faith does not require one party to act reasonably or in the interests of the other.36 [2-11] Conflict between contract rule and good faith. One important conclusion to be drawn from this brief analysis is that if the application of a particular rule or principle of contract law does not produce behaviour which is in accordance with what society requires — in the name of good faith — then there must be something wrong with that rule or principle, and it is that defect which needs to be remedied. Of course, good faith could be used in a general supervisory role, and it might be argued that this is what the cases are doing. But the better view may be to amend the rule.
Content — What Good Faith Means [2-12] Good faith means ‘honesty’. It is well established that good faith
requires ‘honesty’.37 One reason why the law is currently in such a confused [page 28] state is because of a failure to appreciate that ‘honesty’ means much more than a requirement that parties not act fraudulently towards each other. It is, of course, difficult to express the scope of ‘honesty’ in abstract terms, because the characteristics which conduct must have to be honest conduct will depend on the circumstances. This, when combined with the fact that some aspects of good faith are usually expressed in negative terms, has led some to explain good faith as an ‘excluder’, that is, a requirement which does not involve any positive duties.38 ‘Good faith’ sets a standard which is sometimes positive in its orientation and sometimes negative, but just as any condition subsequent can be expressed as a condition precedent, so also can every negative orientation of good faith be expressed in positive terms. It is all a matter of words. However, because good faith is not an independent concept, the good faith content of contract law will depend on the particular rule or principle and, indeed, the terms of each contract. The characteristics which conduct must have to be honest will include: not acting arbitrarily or capriciously; not acting with an intention to cause harm; and acting with due respect for the intent of bargain as a matter of substance not form. Because it is not a fixed concept, good faith may, in particular cases, embrace other things as well. In the context of contract performance and the exercise of discretions and rights, the presence of good faith will be felt in the process of interpretation. Depending on the term in question, good faith may include: acting for a proper purpose; consistency of conduct; communication of decisions; co-operation with the other party; or consideration of the interests of the other party. [2-13] Good faith does not include reasonableness. Absent from the definitions above is a requirement of ‘reasonableness’. To the extent that good
faith is a general requirement applicable to all contracts it does not include a requirement of reasonable conduct. Although there are many cases in which judges have expressed the requirement of good faith in terms of ‘reasonableness’, it is fair to say that the sense of that concept is not yet completely clear. In Burger King Corp v Hungry Jack’s Pty Ltd,39 the New South Wales Court of Appeal did not [page 29] clarify whether there are two implied terms, one of ‘good faith’ and one of ‘reasonableness’, which is what was decided by Rolfe J at first instance,40 or rather, one term of ‘good faith and reasonableness’.41 Although the court did explain that the cases ‘make no distinction of substance between the implied term of reasonableness and that of good faith’,42 it is not clear what conclusion we are meant to draw from this. We are still left in doubt as to whether there is one implication or two, and why, if reasonableness is indeed an implication, good faith is required. It is difficult to see what room there can be for the operation of good faith in addition to reasonableness. In other words, are there any circumstances in which reasonable conduct will not be in good faith? Reasonableness must be seen as an element of honesty and not as an additional requirement. The position is that conduct which no reasonable person could regard as honest is not in good faith.43 On the other hand, some cases apply a far more onerous standard which requires conduct which is ‘objectively reasonable’ in the circumstances.44 [2-14] Good faith distinguished from unconscionable conduct.45 Unconscionable conduct will show a lack of good faith. However, as they are different standards of behaviour the converse is not necessarily true. Similarly, unreasonable conduct is not synonymous with unconscionable behaviour.46 Again, the standards are different and unreasonable conduct is more easily established than unconscionable conduct. Nevertheless, some courts have applied a requirement of good faith to the exercise of contractual rights in the commercial context, and have treated the party having the right as being subject to a requirement of reasonableness. However, that approach pays insufficient regard to the fact that the High Court has consistently left open the question whether the exercise of a contractual right
may be challenged on the ground of unconscionable conduct where no proprietary interest is in issue.47 A requirement that a party act reasonably is clearly more onerous than a requirement that a party not act unconscionably, yet the anomaly has not so far been explained. [page 30]
Agreements to Negotiate [2-15] Good faith in negotiations. In Australia, parties sometimes enter into arrangements under which they agree to negotiate a contract ‘in good faith’. The enforceability and possible breach of these obligations are discussed later in this book.48 Different questions are: whether parties can be forced to negotiate in good faith, when they have not entered into a contract to do so; and whether parties can be forced to renegotiate (in good faith) when something goes wrong in the contract. As for the first question, while good faith might be said to have a role to play, there are many other principles at work during negotiations, which have their origins in equity and are therefore more demanding than the common law, including duress, undue influence, mistake, misrepresentation and unconscionability. Legislation can be added to the list of principles operating, including s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law.49 As for the second issue of whether parties can be forced to renegotiate, the clear answer is ‘no’. While it may be in the parties’ interests to renegotiate, they cannot be forced to do so. Nevertheless, renegotiation may be desirable, in which case it is important to keep the following ideas in mind: The doctrine of uncertainty (and incompleteness).50 If a contract contains an express provision requiring the parties to renegotiate in given circumstances the provision is likely to fall foul of the general principle that an agreement to agree is not binding. The doctrine of consideration.51 This requires a promise to be purchased for value. Where A and B are bound by a contract, and one party agrees to a change in its contractual obligations, the doctrine requires that the change be
purchased for value. So, if one party has agreed to do no more than it was already bound to do, the existing duty rule of consideration will suggest that the renegotiation is not binding. The concept of economic duress.52 Even though there is consideration for the renegotiation, there may be an entitlement to rescind the new contract for economic duress. The concept of repudiation through a threat not to perform.53 In such a case, not only does the law say there is no obligation to renegotiate, it also accords the other party the right to terminate the contract and to claim damages. The doctrine of frustration.54 Where an external event causes a disruption to contract performance, it may or may not discharge the parties. If it does, there is no obligation to enter into a new contract. If it does not, [page 31] the party who benefits from the change in circumstances is entitled to insist on performance, and to claim damages from the other party if it does not perform. The rules on mitigation of loss.55 Where the plaintiff is able to complete performance without the defendant’s assistance, and claim in debt rather than damages, the law effectively discourages renegotiation.
Good Faith in Performance [2-16] Where is good faith found? Good faith will be seen in the operation of different contract principles, since it is inherent in our law. However, good faith can also be seen in the following contexts, which will be discussed below: the general obligation to co-operate; specific areas of the law, such as insurance and fiduciary obligations; and the development of an implied term of good faith, especially in relation to rights of termination. [2-17] General obligation to ‘co-operate’. It is generally accepted that there is an obligation on contracting parties to co-operate with each other or to do all that is reasonably necessary to facilitate performance of a contract.56 Sometimes it
seems the principle of co-operation in construction is seen as part of the wider principle of construction that a party is not entitled to take advantage of its own wrong.57 Other aspects of ‘cooperation’ include: an obligation not to hinder or prevent the fulfilment of the other party’s purpose;58 an obligation to do all such things as are necessary to enable the other party to have the benefit of the contract;59 an obligation not to prevent the other party from performing the contract.60 ‘Co-operation’ is sometimes seen as equivalent to ‘good faith’.61 The effect of requiring co-operation often overlaps with what is trying to be [page 32] achieved by the newly created obligation of ‘good faith’. Co-operation (or good faith, if that term is preferred) embraces a duty to act honestly and (in some cases) a duty to have regard to the legitimate interests of the other party.62 The notion of co-operation is necessarily flexible and takes its precise meaning from specific contexts. [2-18] Use of ‘good faith’ elsewhere. In areas of law, outside contract, ‘good faith’ finds some expression. It is, for example, commonly acknowledged that ‘good faith’ is an important aspect of insurance law63 and fiduciary obligations.64 These are specific areas of law and should not be confused with the development of good faith in the context of the general law of contract. [2-19] No general implied term. In a number of cases, judges have suggested that the requirement of good faith, and reasonableness in the exercise of rights, arises from an implied term (or terms) of the contract.65 This implied term has been treated in some cases as one implied in fact. Although in some cases it has been suggested that the term should be regarded as one implied in law,66 the recent cases do not support that view.67 The better view is that because good faith is already inherent in contract doctrines, rules and principles, if a court implies a term of good faith the court is implying a redundant term.68 Alternatively it is implying a term which, by definition, must impose a more onerous requirement than the good faith requirement found in all aspects of contract law. Such a term must surely be
justified by reference to particular circumstances and not general principle. In other words, in some cases it will be appropriate to imply a term which imposes a higher standard of good faith than the law otherwise requires, but it will necessarily have to satisfy the well-established rules for implication and will be a rare phenomenon.69 In relation to the cases which suggest a term of good faith is implied in law, it is sufficient to say that such an implied term merely creates a default rule, and since that default rule already exists it is also an illegitimate implication. But it is also [page 33] puzzling that courts should think it necessary to use the terminology of implied term in relation to something which is part of every contract!70 [2-20] Implied term of good faith can be excluded. Assuming that good faith is a universal term, implied in all contracts, can it be excluded expressly by the parties? Any suggestion that the term cannot be excluded must confront at least two problems. First, a term cannot be implied if it is inconsistent with the contract; there would be no ‘gap’ for the term to fill. The only implied terms that cannot be excluded are those incorporated by legislation which expressly or impliedly prohibits exclusion, and terms which it would be contrary to public policy to exclude. Examples of the former include terms which used to be implied in consumer sales under the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth).71 Second, the public policy prohibition is currently extremely narrow, and any public policy prohibition on the exclusion of an implied term of good faith would need to be of limited effect since it would otherwise have a significant and quite unpredictable impact on the considerable freedom of contract which currently exists in the commercial context. To suggest that despite a clear intention to the contrary, the parties could not exclude or modify an obligation to perform in good faith is contrary to the current state of law.72 It would also be a retrograde step to introduce this restriction. Some decisions accept that an implied obligation of good faith can be excluded by the parties clearly expressing such an intention. For example, in Vodafone Pacific Ltd v Mobile Innovations Ltd,73 Giles JA held that the agreement had effectively excluded the operation of an implied term of good
faith and reasonableness in the exercise of a discretion. He based this decision on the combined effect of:74 the wording of an absolute discretion, which contrasted with other clauses expressly requiring reasonable behaviour and even good faith; the existence of a clause which stated ‘To the full extent permitted by Law and other than expressly set out in this Agreement the parties exclude all implied terms’; and an entire agreement clause. [page 34]
Termination of Contracts75 [2-21] Leading decision of Renard. In Renard Constructions (ME) Pty Ltd v Minister for Public Works76 cl 44.1 of the contract provided that if the contractor defaulted the principal was entitled to call upon the contractor, by notice in writing, to ‘show cause within a period specified in the notice’ why the powers set out in the clause ‘should not be exercised’. Clause 44.1 included requirements of form and content: The notice in writing shall state that it is a notice under the provisions of this clause and shall specify the default, refusal or neglect on the part of the Contractor upon which it is based.
It should be noticed that the clause expressly incorporates good faith elements — notice, writing, statement that it is under cl 41, specification of default — which might otherwise have been treated as implicit on the basis of commercial construction. The clause went on to provide: If the Contractor fails within the period specified in the notice in writing to show cause to the satisfaction of the Principal why the powers hereinafter contained should not be exercised the Principal, without prejudice to any other rights that he may have under the Contract against the Contractor, may: (a) take over the whole or any part of the work remaining to be completed and for that purpose and in so far as it may be necessary exclude from the site the Contractor and any other person concerned in the performance of the work under the Contract; or (b) cancel the Contract, and in that case exercise any of the powers of exclusion conferred by subparagraph (a) of this paragraph.
When the contractor did not complete the work on time, the principal served a notice under cl 44.1. Although there was no doubt that the contractor was in
default, it was also clear that the delay was in part attributable to the principal’s failure to provide necessary materials in accordance with the contract. Subsequently, the principal purported to terminate the contract. But its decision to do so was found to have been based on ‘misleading, incomplete and prejudicial information’. In those circumstances, a majority of the court considered that the contractor was correct in its contention that the principal had not complied with an implied term which required the principal to act reasonably. Meagher JA, on the other hand, considered that the principal had not complied with cl 44.1. He preferred to decide the case on the simple and compelling basis that the clause required the principal to act on accurate information when forming a view on whether the contractor had shown cause. [2-22] Good faith in construction.The decision in Renard Constructions (ME) Pty Ltd v Minister for Public Works77 has interesting parallels with Carr v J A Berriman Pty Ltd,78 a case which illustrates not only that good faith flows from interpretation not implied terms but also that good faith is not a [page 35] new concept in our law. The main issue was whether the principal had repudiated a building contract. In the course of considering that issue the High Court made some observations (which have ever since been regarded as authoritative) on cl 1 of the conditions annexed to the contract. This provided that the architect could, ‘in his absolute discretion and from time to time issue … written instructions or written directions … in regard to the … omission … of any work’. The builder was required ‘forthwith’ to comply with the architect’s instructions. The principal contended that this clause entitled it to omit steel fabrication work from the contract for the purpose of having the work done by a third party. Fullagar J (with whom the other members of the High Court agreed) explained:79 The clause is a common and useful clause, the obvious purpose of which … is to enable the architect to direct additions to, or substitutions in, or omissions from, the building as planned, which may turn out, in his opinion, to be desirable in the course of the performance of the contract. The words quoted from it would authorize the architect (doubtless within certain limits …) to direct that particular items of work included in the plans and specifications shall not be carried out. But they do not, in my opinion, authorize him to say that particular items so included shall be carried out not by the builder with whom the contract is made but by some other builder or contractor. The words used do not, in their natural meaning, extend so far, and a power in the architect to hand over at will any part of the contract to another contractor would be a most unreasonable power, which very clear words would be required to confer.
While the description ‘good faith’ is not used, it is clear that the High Court adopted a good faith interpretation. The methodology is instructive. There is no reference to implied terms. The position seems precisely the same in Renard: interpretation was enough to show that the principal was not entitled to act in the way it had acted. The interpretation for which the principal in Renard contended would have created, to use Fullagar J’s words ‘a most unreasonable power’, because it would have permitted the principal to decide that cause had not been shown without ever taking accurate information into account. Accordingly, just as in Carr v Berriman there was no need to imply a term, so also in Renard there was no need for any implied term. If the matter must be expressed in terms of reasonableness, since the clause did not on its face entitle the principal to act unreasonably, the onus was on the principal to establish, by recourse to implied terms or otherwise, that it was entitled to act unreasonably.
Commercial Construction [2-23] ‘Principles’ of commercial construction. In Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society,80 Lord Hoffmann set out the following ‘principles’ of commercial construction: (1) Interpretation is the ascertainment of the meaning which the document would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract.
[page 36] (2) The background was famously referred to by Lord Wilberforce as the ‘matrix of fact’, but this phrase is, if anything, an understated description of what the background may include. Subject to the requirement that it should have been reasonably available to the parties and to the exception to be mentioned next, it includes absolutely anything which would have affected the way in which the language of the document would have been understood by a reasonable man. (3) The law excludes from the admissible background the previous negotiations of the parties and their declarations of subjective intent. They are admissible only in an action for rectification. The law makes this distinction for reasons of practical policy and, in this respect only, legal interpretation differs from the way we would interpret utterances in ordinary life. The boundaries of this exception are in some respects unclear. But this is not the occasion on which to explore them. (4) The meaning which a document (or any other utterance) would convey to a reasonable man is not the same thing as the meaning of its words. The meaning of words is a matter of dictionaries and grammars; the meaning of the document is what the parties using those words against the relevant background would reasonably have been understood to mean. The background may not merely enable the reasonable man to choose between the possible meanings of words which are ambiguous but even
(as occasionally happens in ordinary life) to conclude that the parties must, for whatever reason, have used the wrong words or syntax: see Mannai Investments Co Ltd v Eagle Star Life Assurance Co Ltd [1997] AC 749. (5) The ‘rule’ that words should be given their ‘natural and ordinary meaning’ reflects the common sense proposition that we do not easily accept that people have made linguistic mistakes, particularly in formal documents. On the other hand, if one would nevertheless conclude from the background that something must have gone wrong with the language, the law does not require judges to attribute to the parties an intention which they plainly could not have had. Lord Diplock made this point more vigorously when he said in Antaios Compania Naviera SA v Salen Rederierna AB [1985] AC 191 at 201: if detailed semantic and syntactical analysis of words in a commercial contract is going to lead to a conclusion that flouts business commonsense, it must be made to yield to business commonsense.
The extent to which Australian law has adopted this statement as a set of guidelines is unclear.81 Controversy has surrounded the concept of the factual matrix.82 [2-24] ‘Incidents’ of commercial construction. Commercial construction is a process not a rule. The statement of Lord Hoffmann in Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society83 is a mixture of construction rules and particular aspects of the process of commercial construction. Commercial construction is best seen as a set of ‘incidents’. Those incidents include:84 [page 37] proper use of the context of the contract as an aid to construction;85 assertion of a common sense approach under which lack of clarity may be ignored for the purpose of giving effect to a commercially sensible construction;86 rejection of literal or strict approaches to construction;87 a preference to rationalise conclusions by reference to the meaning and effect of the express terms of the contract — rather than by the implication of a term;88 and where a choice must be made between two or more possible constructions of a contract, use of specific construction rules and preferences to achieve a construction which is reasonable or sensible.89 Although these incidents are not by any means the exclusive source of good
faith in contract law, they are both based on and designed to achieve good faith. Indeed, good faith is the reason behind the objective approach of contract law and in particular the specific rule that words should be construed as a reasonable person would understand them — rather than by reference to the subjective intention of the person responsible for the words.90 1.
This discussion is based in part on J W Carter and Elisabeth Peden, ‘Good Faith in Australian Contract Law’ (2003) 19 JCL 155.
2.
(1992) 26 NSWLR 234.
3.
(1992) 26 NSWLR 234 at 258.
4.
See, eg R Powell, ‘Good Faith in Contracts’ [1956] 9 CLP 16; H K Lücke, ‘Good Faith and Contractual Performance’ in Finn, ed, Essays on Contract, 1987; The Hon Mr Justice Steyn, ‘The Role of Good Faith and Fair Dealing in Contract Law: A Hair-Shirt Philosophy?’ [1991] Denning LJ 131; J W Carter and M P Furmston, ‘Good Faith and Fairness in the Negotiation of Contracts’ (1994) 8 JCL 1 and (1995) 8 JCL 93; R Brownsword, ‘Two Concepts of Good Faith’ (1994) 7 JCL 197; J Beatson and D Friedmann, ‘Introduction: From “Classical” to Modern Contract Law’ in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995. Sir Anthony Mason, ‘Contract, Good Faith and Equitable Standards in Fair Dealing’ (2000) 116 LQR 66; H O Hunter, ‘The Growing Uncertainty about Good Faith in American Contract Law’ (2004) 20 JCL 50; Howard Hunter, ‘Good Faith and the Construction of Terms in Commercial Contracts: The American Perspective’ (2009) 25 JCL 39.
5.
See [2-23]–[2-24], [12-01].
6.
On the interaction between construction and implication approaches see Peden, Good Faith in the Performance of Contracts, 2003, Chapter 2 and paras 6.10–6.19.
7.
This was basically Kirby J’s concern with the idea of incorporating good faith in Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust v South Sydney City Council (2002) 240 CLR 45; 186 ALR 289 at 311– 12.
8.
Cf Stocznia Gdanska SA v Latvian Shipping Co [1996] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 132 at 139 (varied without reference to the point [1998] 1 WLR 574).
9.
See generally on contract formation Chapter 3.
10.
See [3-07].
11.
With the result that an offeror who has posted a letter of revocation is contractually bound to an offeree who has already posted a letter of acceptance: Byrne v Van Tienhoven (1880) 5 CPD 344.
12.
Calls for a doctrine of ‘firm offer’ to be part of Australian law (cf United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (1980), Art 16) are in one sense simply calls for a more onerous good faith standard and are therefore problematic because of the requirement of consideration. In other words, the law cannot regard a person as acting contrary to good faith merely because they rely on the requirement of consideration. But concepts such as promissory estoppel fulfil a limiting role, and reduce the need to abolish the requirement of consideration.
13.
(1862) 11 CBNS 869; 142 ER 1037. See [3-29].
14.
See generally on implied terms Chapter 11.
15.
Cf Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 450; 131 ALR 422 at 450 per McHugh and Gummow JJ (‘concern of the courts that, unless such a term be implied, the enjoyment of the rights conferred by the contract would or could be rendered nugatory, worthless, or, perhaps, be
seriously undermined’). 16.
See, eg Liverpool City Council v Irwin [1977] AC 239.
17.
For a discussion of the test of implication in law see Elisabeth Peden, ‘Policy Concerns in Terms Implied in Law’ (2001) 117 LQR 459.
18.
See generally on the incorporation of terms [10-15]–[10-19].
19.
[1989] QB 433 (see [10-17].
20.
[1989] QB 433 at 439.
21.
[1989] QB 433 at 443.
22.
See generally on interpretation, Chapter 12.
23.
See [12-04].
24.
See generally on vitiating factors Part V.
25.
See Chapter 18.
26.
See Chapter 20.
27.
Cf Trans-Pacific Insurance Co (Australia) Ltd v Grand Union Insurance Co Ltd (1989) 18 NSWLR 675. See also generally, F Hawke, ‘Utmost Good Faith — What Does it Really Mean?’ (1994) 6 Ins LJ 91; C Tay, ‘The Duty of Disclosure and Materiality in Insurance Contracts — a True Descendant of the Duty of Utmost Good Faith?’ (2002) 13 Ins LJ 183.
28.
See generally on frustration Part IX.
29.
[1956] AC 696 at 729. See [33-01].
30.
E W Patterson, ‘Constructive Conditions in Contracts’ (1942) 42 Col LR 903.
31.
[1956] AC 696 at 729.
32.
[1956] AC 696 at 728.
33.
See generally on remedies Part X.
34.
(1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151. See [35-08].
35.
See [35-33]–[35-37].
36.
See also the discussion in J W Carter, Andrew Phang and Sock-Yong Phang, ‘Performance Following Repudiation: Legal and Economic Interests’ (1999) 15 JCL 97 of the appropriate rationale for Lord Reid’s ‘legitimate interest qualification’ in White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor [1962] AC 413 at 431.
37.
See, eg Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW), s 5(2) (‘A thing is deemed to be done “in good faith” within the meaning of this Act when it is in fact done honestly, whether it be done negligently or not’); Sir Anthony Mason, ‘Contract, Good Faith and Equitable Standards in Fair Dealing’ (2000) 116 LQR 66.
38.
The ‘classic’ explanation along these lines is by Robert S Summers, ‘“Good Faith” in General Contract Law and the Sales Provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code’ (1968) 54 Va L Rev 195. See also Renard Constructions (ME) Pty Ltd v Minister for Public Works (1992) 26 NSWLR 234 at 266; Burger King Corp v Hungry Jack’s Pty Ltd [2001] NSWCA 187 at para [149].
39.
[2001] NSWCA 187.
40.
Cited by the Court of Appeal: [2001] NSWCA 187 at paras [141]–[142].
41.
[2001] NSWCA 187 at para [158], where the singular and plural are mixed: ‘there may be implied, as a legal incident of a commercial contract, terms of good faith and reasonableness’. Later at [164] the plural ‘terms’ is used, and could either refer to several terms of ‘good faith and reasonableness’ or two
separate terms, one of ‘good faith’ and one of ‘reasonableness’. 42.
[2001] NSWCA 187 at para [169]. It is possible to find decisions that distinguish the concepts. See eg Francis v South Sydney District Rugby League Football Club Ltd [2002] FCA 1306 at para [203].
43.
Cf Paragon Finance Plc v Nash [2002] 1 WLR 685 at 701–4.
44.
Jane Stapleton, ‘Good Faith in Private Law’ (1999) 52 CLP 1.
45.
See generally Chapter 24. See also Elisabeth Peden, ‘When Common Law Trumps Equity: the Rise of Good Faith and Reasonableness and the Demise of Unconscionability’ (2005) 21 JCL 226.
46.
See J W Carter and Andrew Stewart, ‘Interpretation, Good Faith and the “True Meaning” of Contracts: The Royal Botanic Decision’ (2002) 18 JCL 182 at 190–4.
47.
See Sunbird Plaza Pty Ltd v Maloney (1988) 166 CLR 245 at 263; 77 ALR 205.
48.
See [4-14].
49.
See generally Chapter 19.
50.
See Chapter 4.
51.
See generally Chapter 6.
52.
See generally Chapter 22.
53.
See [30-37]–[30-41].
54.
See generally Chapter 33.
55.
See [35-33]–[35-37].
56.
See Mackay v Dick (1881) 6 App Cas 251; Nullagine Investments Pty Ltd v Western Australian Club Inc (1993) 177 CLR 635 at 659; Commissioner of Taxation v Sara Lee Household & Body Care (Aust) Pty Ltd (2000) 201 CLR 520 at 547; 172 ALR 346.
57.
See, eg Antclizo Shipping Corp v Food Corp of India [1992] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 558.
58.
Shepherd v Felt & Textiles of Australia Ltd (1931) 45 CLR 359 at 378.
59.
Butt v M’Donald (1896) 7 QLJ 68 at 70–1; Secured Income Real Estate (Aust) Ltd v St Martins Investments Pty Ltd (1979) 144 CLR 596 at 607; 26 ALR 567. See [2809].
60.
William Cory & Son Ltd v London Corporation [1951] 2 KB 476 at 484.
61.
See, eg Expectation Pty Ltd v Pinnacle VRB Ltd [2002] WASCA 160 at paras [89]– [90]. Cf United Group Rail Services Ltd v Rail Corporation of New South Wales (2009) 74 NSWLR 618 at 635; [2009] NSWCA 177 at [61]. See also Roger Brownsword, ‘Two Concepts of Good Faith’ (1994) 7 JCL 197.
62.
J W Carter and M P Furmston, ‘Good Faith and Fairness in the Negotiation of Contracts’ (1994) 8 JCL 1 at 7.
63.
See, eg Sutton, Insurance Law in Australia, 3rd ed, 1999, para 3.7. See also [2-08].
64.
Good faith in contract does not require parties to act as fiduciaries: see Burger King Corp v Hungry Jack’s Pty Ltd [2001] NSWCA 187 at para [185].
65.
For an overview see Elisabeth Peden, ‘Incorporating Terms of Good Faith in Contract Law in Australia’ (2001) 23 Syd LR 222; Peden, Good Faith in the Performance of Contracts, 2003, paras 6.10–6.19.
66.
See, eg Burger King v Hungry Jack’s Pty Ltd [2001] NSWCA 187 at [164]; Alcatel Australia Ltd v Scarcella (1998) 44 NSWLR 349 at 369. Cf Renard Constructions (ME) Pty Ltd v Minister for Public Works (1992) 26 NSWLR 234 at 263 where Priestley JA seemed to conceive of a ‘hybrid’ term.
67.
See CGU Workers Compensation (NSW) Ltd v Garcia (2007) 69 NSWLR 680 at 704, 710; [2007] NSWCA 193 at [132], [168]; Sundararajah v Teachers Federation Health Ltd (2011) 283 ALR 720 at 731; [2011] FCA 1031 at [64]–[68].
68.
See Elisabeth Peden, ‘“Implicit Good Faith” — or Do We Still Need an Implied Term of Good Faith?’ (2009) 25 JCL 50.
69.
See generally on implied terms Chapter 11.
70.
For a comparison of the approach taken to the historical implied term of frustration see Peden, Good Faith in the Performance of Contracts, 2003, paras 2.8–2.10.
71.
Under the Australian Consumer Law, implied terms have been replaced by statutory consumer guarantees. See Chapter 11.
72.
See, eg GSA Group v Siebe Plc (1993) 30 NSWLR 573, where Rogers CJ Comm D refused to incorporate an obligation of good faith into the contract because of its nature. The parties were commercial entities of equal bargaining power and ‘able to look after their own interests’.
73.
[2004] NSWCA 15.
74.
[2004] NSWCA 15 at paras [195]ff. See also GEC Marconi Systems Pty Ltd v BHP Information Technology Pty Ltd [2003] FCA 50 at paras 918–20, where Finn J recognised the limits of the implied term approach.
75.
See generally on termination for breach Part VIII.
76.
(1992) 26 NSWLR 234.
77.
(1992) 26 NSWLR 234.
78.
(1953) 89 CLR 327.
79.
(1953) 89 CLR 327 at 347.
80.
[1998] 1 WLR 896 at 912–13. Lords Goff, Hope and Clyde agreed.
81.
See David McLauchlan, ‘Plain Meaning and Commercial Construction: Has Australia Adopted the ICS Principles?’ (2009) 25 JCL 7.
82.
See [12-13]–[12-15].
83.
[1998] 1 WLR 896 at 912–13.
84.
See also [12-01].
85.
See [12-13]–[12-15].
86.
See Chapter 4.
87.
See eg Darlington Futures Ltd v Delco Australia Pty Ltd (1986) 161 CLR 500; 68 ALR 385.
88.
Cf Attorney General of Belize v Belize Telecom Ltd [2009] 1 WLR 1988; [2009] UKPC 10.
89.
See eg Rainy Sky SA v Kookmin Bank [2011] 1 WLR 2900; [2011] UKSC 50. But see Jireh International Pty Ltd t/as Gloria Jean’s Coffee v Western Exports Services Inc [2011] NSWCA 137, SLR (2011) 282 ALR 604; [2011] HCA 45 (‘uncommercial’ construction chosen because it was not ‘absurd’); see David McLauchlan and Matthew Lees, ‘Construction Controversy’ (2011) 28 JCL 101.
90.
See [12-03].
[page 39]
PART II
Agreement
[page 41]
Chapter 3
Formation of Contract [3-01] Importance of agreement. The law of contract is concerned with the rights and obligations which arise from the making of a promise which the law will enforce. Except in the case of contracts under seal (deed form),1 such consequences arise only when two or more parties have reached agreement. This chapter will consider the rules employed by the law in deciding when parties have reached an agreement. The foundation of the legal relations which we call ‘contract’ is the agreement of the parties, even though the law increasingly imposes rights and obligations upon contracting parties without reference to their real intentions.2 In the absence of agreement (or, perhaps more accurately, in the absence of circumstances which the law treats as giving rise to agreement),3 there can be no contract. Although the existence of agreement is essential, it is not of itself sufficient, for an agreement may fail to take effect as an enforceable contract because another essential element is missing, such as consideration4 or contractual intention5 or some required formality.6
Some General Points [3-02] The traditional approach. The traditional approach to the question of whether parties have concluded negotiations and reached agreement is to inquire whether there has been both offer and acceptance; that is, a clear indication (‘offer’) by one party (the ‘offeror’) of a willingness to be bound on certain terms, accompanied by an unqualified assent to that offer communicated by the other party (the ‘offeree’) to the offeror (‘acceptance’). So accustomed have lawyers become to the analysis of problems of formation of contract in terms of offer and acceptance that it is often overlooked that this method of analysis is of comparatively recent origin and appears to have developed in the 19th century as a result of the need to provide a framework for the increasing number of cases where parties dealt with each other at a distance by communicating by letter or
telegram (or, more recently, by telephone, email, telex or facsimile).7 [page 42] [3-03] Limitations on traditional approach. In the past, some writers insisted that the correspondence of offer and acceptance was an inevitable requirement of contractual agreement.8 Sometimes such an approach is very artificial. Where a contract is formed by both parties signing a written document, it may sometimes be possible to regard the party who signs first as being the offeror,9 and yet it will usually be a matter of chance which party happens to put pen to paper first. Contracts for the sale of land are very commonly formed by the parties (or their representatives) exchanging duplicate copies of the agreement, so that each party possesses a copy signed by the other. In such a case it seems pointless (as well as artificial) to attempt to analyse the formation of agreement in terms of a succession of offer and acceptance.10 The classic illustration of a case which seems to defy analysis in terms of offer and acceptance is Clarke v Dunraven11 where the owners of yachts entered in a race run by a yachting club agreed with the club to be bound by the club rules. When the defendant’s yacht, in breach of the rules, collided with that of the plaintiff, it was held that each owner had impliedly contracted with every other owner to be bound by the rules. The House of Lords had little difficulty in holding that such a series of contracts had arisen (the main point of discussion being the correct interpretation of the rules), and yet it seems impossible to provide a satisfactory analysis explaining this result in terms of offer and acceptance.12 The true situation is that a binding agreement can be found without identifying an offer and acceptance.13 Often there is little doubt on the facts that agreement has in fact been reached. It is in cases where one party denies the other party’s claim that agreement had been finalised that an analysis of the facts in terms of offer and acceptance will prove useful. Offer and acceptance is best seen as an analytical tool which, in at least the great majority of disputed cases, assists in determining whether the parties had in fact reached agreement. Business people do not usually conduct negotiations in terms of such concepts as offer, acceptance, revocation and counter-offer which feature in [page 43]
this chapter.14 For example, a statement described as an ‘acceptance’ may very well be, in legal effect, a ‘counter-offer’. Our task is to look to the intentions of the parties as disclosed by their words and conduct and to attempt, by applying such concepts to the facts, to see whether agreement was ever reached. [3-04] Lengthy negotiations. Where agreement has been reached after lengthy negotiations, the analysis of those negotiations in terms of offer and acceptance may at times seem rather unrealistic. In particular, where a series of offers are put and rejected and replaced by counter-proposals, it will be a matter of pure chance as to which of the parties is ultimately seen as offeror and which as offeree (‘acceptor’).15 In such cases the analysis will usually indicate whether or not at some point in time negotiations ceased and final agreement was reached. So long as the analytical tools employed enable us to answer this ultimate question, it does not matter which party made the final offer which was converted into a contract on acceptance by the other party.16 It is true that the arbitrary characterisation of one of the parties as acceptor rather than offeror may have crucial consequences when the question arises as to the time or place where a contract was formed,17 but this is a result not so much of the inadequacies of the rules governing formation of contract but of the use of those rules to solve an entirely different problem for which they may not be well suited. [3-05] Agreement inferred from conduct. The formation of agreement will in many cases be inferred from the conduct of the parties. Sometimes there may be no identifiable offer and acceptance because the parties have not expressly discussed the formation of contract but have indicated by their conduct that they did in fact intend to contract.18 In many cases a more realistic explanation is that by the time a dispute arises, perhaps many years after the alleged contract was entered into, no direct evidence is available of what was said by the parties and yet their conduct is consistent only with the hypothesis that an agreement was in fact made by them.19 In other cases an express offer has been made which was never expressly accepted or rejected, but the subsequent conduct of the offeree in performing the acts contemplated in the offer indicate an intention to accept. [page 44] Thus, in Brown v Brown20 the defendant instructed her architect to prepare a contract and call for tenders for the erection of a house. The architect, acting
under the defendant’s instructions, accepted the plaintiff’s tender. The defendant never signed the contract, nor was she aware of its terms, but the house was built and certain interim payments were made by the defendant, and in correspondence she referred to ‘the contract’. In these circumstances it was held that she was bound by the written contract. The defendant’s consent could be inferred from conduct, even though it might have been impossible to establish a precise point in time when the offer of the other party was accepted. (This situation must be distinguished from an offer of a unilateral contract,21 which calls for acceptance by performance of an act stipulated in the offer; we are here concerned with contracts where the commencement of performance by the offeree is seen as implying a promise to complete that performance, that is an acceptance, giving rise to a bilateral contract.) [3-06] Objective approach. The law is concerned with the interpretation which would be placed upon the words and actions of the parties by a reasonable person, rather than upon their subjective intentions.22 This approach is based partly upon practical problems of proof, and partly upon the notion that a person is entitled to act on the basis that what another appears to intend will be binding upon him or her. Thus an offer must normally be interpreted in the sense in which it would reasonably be understood by an ordinary person, even though the offeror’s actual meaning was otherwise. Likewise, even if a party is convinced that a contract was formed on the sending of a letter by that party, no contract will result if ‘the meaning that would be conveyed to an ordinary sensible person by that letter’ was that there was no binding contract and that the matter was still open to negotiation.23 On the other hand, acts otherwise amounting to acceptance are not prevented from being effective because of a reservation not communicated to the other party.24 Further, the law will sometimes hold that an acceptance by mail is effective even though, unknown to the offeree, a letter withdrawing the offer had previously been posted to him.25 However, in the great majority of cases a person’s apparent intention will in fact reflect their real intention. In general, the common law is in principle committed to an objective approach, even though occasionally this approach is not applied with complete consistency.26 Much of the difficulty of the law of mistake (discussed in Chapter 20) arises from confusion over this point. [page 45]
Offer [3-07] Definition. An offer may be described as the indication by one person to another of his or her willingness to enter into a contract with that person on certain terms.27 The ‘offer’ must indicate a willingness by the offeror to be bound without further negotiation as to the terms of the proposed contract. Although the making of an offer cannot, of course, in itself give rise to a contract, an offer does have legal significance in that it creates in the offeree a power subsequently to create a contract by the offeree’s unilateral action, that is, by accepting the offer (provided that the offer has not previously been withdrawn or otherwise terminated).28 Whether a statement is an offer depends on whether the person to whom it is addressed would reasonably interpret it as such, and this question depends on the interpretation of what has been said by the parties. Where it is alleged, for example, that a letter or series of letters should be read as containing an offer, the correspondence must be looked at as a whole. A good example is to be found in Australian Woollen Mills Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth,29 where letters were held to contain merely a statement of government policy as to a proposed subsidy scheme for manufacturers rather than an offer capable of acceptance by the plaintiff manufacturer. A statement of intention as to a future course of action, not put forward as an offer and not inviting acceptance or rejection cannot be an offer.30 As it is the intention of the alleged offeror which is decisive, the word ‘offer’ may have been used colloquially and indicate merely a willingness to commence negotiations.31 This is especially true where a document is drawn up by lay people without legal assistance.32 Sometimes a statement described as an ‘agreement’ is held to be merely an offer as it was clear that there was no concluded agreement,33 and a statement which is expressed as an acceptance may be held in the circumstances to be an offer.34 [page 46]
Offer and Invitation to Treat [3-08] Invitation to treat distinguished from offer. The question often arises as
to whether a seller who has indicated a desire to sell certain goods has made an offer which is capable of binding the seller. Often the seller will have issued an ‘invitation to treat’ — a request to others to make offers or to engage in negotiations with a sale in mind. If the seller has only issued an invitation to treat, a reply to the invitation will at most be an offer (even if phrased in terms of acceptance) which the seller has the option to accept or reject. (Of course, the reply itself will not necessarily amount to an offer — it may itself be merely an indication of willingness to negotiate.) Whether a statement is an offer depends on the interpretation reasonably to be placed upon it by someone in the position of the receiver. In all cases the question to be asked is whether the statement can be taken as indicating an intention by the alleged offeror to be bound, without further discussion or negotiation, on acceptance of the terms set out by the offeror. Rules have been developed by the courts as to some commonly recurring situations, but these rules simply indicate the normal inference to be drawn in such situations as to intention. Care must be taken not to apply them mechanically, for it is always possible that the language used, or the surrounding circumstances (including previous discussion between the parties), will indicate that the normal inference would be inappropriate in a particular factual situation. It may also be noted that there remain commonly recurring situations where the appropriate prima facie analysis of the facts in terms of offer and acceptance may still cause difficulties. Stephen J once remarked that ‘[the] doctrine, of the formation of contracts by offer and acceptance, encounters difficulties when sought to be applied, outside the realms of commerce and conveyancing, to the everyday contractual situations which are a feature of life in modern urban communities’.35 The circulation of price lists or of other promotional material giving particulars of goods for sale does not usually amount to the making of an offer. This is so even though the material may refer to the seller ‘offering for sale’ the goods concerned, for in that case the word ‘offer’ will normally be read in its colloquial sense of indicating a willingness to consider a sale while still retaining the freedom to reject any particular proposal which may be made in response to the ‘offer’. Thus, in Spencer v Harding36 it was held that a circular stating ‘we are instructed to offer to the trade for sale’ certain described goods was merely an invitation to treat and not an offer capable of acceptance. The same result follows where goods are advertised for sale37 or are displayed for sale in a shop.38 The result reached in such cases is
[page 47] often put on the basis that were the seller to be regarded as making an offer, the number of orders (that is, binding acceptances) received would be potentially limitless and might well exceed the seller’s total stock.39 Then the seller could not actually perform each contract, but would be liable in damages to each customer whose order was not filled. But the difficulty that the seller cannot know in advance how many orders will be received could be met, if an offer were in fact intended, by an express provision limiting the seller’s liability to the amount of stock in hand or, in the case of a poster displayed at the point of sale, by removal of the poster when stocks were sold out.40 An advertisement can take effect as an offer.41 Thus, in Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co42 the defendant advertised its medical preparation in a number of newspapers and stated that ‘£100 reward will be paid by the Carbolic Smoke Ball Company to any person who contracts the increasing epidemic influenza … after having used the ball … according to the printed directions supplied with each ball’. The plaintiff, who caught influenza despite having used the smoke ball as directed, claimed payment of £100 and succeeded. A number of issues were involved in this case, but the point relevant here is that the judges were unanimous in regarding the advertisement as an offer, which was accepted by those members of the public who used the balls on the faith of the advertisement and still caught influenza. The advertisement was one for a unilateral contract (a promise in return for an act)43 and acceptance occurred by the plaintiff’s conduct without any direct contact with the company prior to her lodging her claim for £100. The fact that the nature of the proposed transaction involves no negotiation between the parties no doubt explains why cases of advertisements offering rewards for the return of lost or stolen property, or for the supply of information leading to the arrest or conviction of criminals, are almost always treated by the courts as amounting to offers.44 The argument that the advertisement in Carlill’s case was a mere puff, not capable of giving rise to a contract, was met by pointing to the precision with which the promise to pay the reward was made (despite the [page 48] extravagance of the claims made in regard to the efficacy of the preparation).
The conclusive point was perhaps that the advertisement went on to state that ‘£1000 is deposited with the Alliance Bank, shewing our sincerity in the matter’. However, the result would not necessarily have been different in the absence of this statement. The advertisement had to be read in its plain meaning, as the public would understand it, and it was held that it would be understood by the public as an offer which was to be acted upon. Similarly, although the display of goods for sale will not normally be regarded as constituting an offer for sale, the display of an automatic vending machine apparently constitutes an offer which is accepted by those customers who insert their money into the machine.45 [3-09] Statement of price. Can a statement by a seller, made in answer to an inquiry, of the price at which he or she is prepared to sell goods amount to an offer? The circumstances may indicate that the seller is prepared to be bound without further negotiations, and the law will imply terms about issues such as time for delivery. However, the more valuable the subject matter of the transaction and the more complex the contemplated transaction, the less likely it is that a mere agreement on price will bind the parties. For example, in Howard Smith & Co Ltd v Varawa46 it was argued that an agreement for the sale of a steamship for £28,000 was to be found in a series of international telegrams exchanged between the parties. Griffith CJ commented:47 No doubt a contract for the purchase of a named ship for a lump sum without more may be a good and complete contract. But it is highly improbable that it would be made unless both parties were familiar with the subject matter, and were ad idem as to what was intended to be included by the name of the ship, and it seems to me still more improbable when one of the parties had no acquaintance with the subject matter which was at a distance of several thousand miles. Was it intended to include the apparel and furniture of the ship, which was a passenger ship, or not? Was the delivery to be immediate or deferred, and to whom and where was it to be made? … Upon the sale of a ship certain matters must be provided for, either expressly or by implication. In this case there is no express provision, and the circumstances do not afford grounds for any definite implication.
A number of cases have involved contracts for the sale of land. Quite apart from the question of price, a large number of important questions arise in such cases: for example, whether vacant possession is to be given (a matter of particular importance if the property is tenanted); whether encumbrances such as existing mortgages are to be discharged prior to conveyance of title; (in the case of land not under Torrens system title) the nature of the title which the purchaser must accept; and the time within which the transaction is to be completed by transfer of title and payment of purchase price. These matters are normally governed by quite lengthy and [page 49]
detailed written contracts drawn up by the parties’ legal advisers (or, in some States, land agents). Such a formal contract is not, however, essential, and provided that the parties have identified the subject matter and agreed on a price, the most informal agreement (usually called an ‘open contract’) may be effective as a binding contract, and the types of questions referred to above will be governed by terms implied, in the absence of express agreement, by the common law or by statute.48 The courts will look particularly carefully at the correspondence49 for some clear indication that, despite the absence of agreement on details, a concluded contract was really intended by the parties. This is because parties do not normally intend to be bound until a contract governing such matters has been entered into, and the terms implied by law into open contracts are frequently considered as giving insufficient protection to the parties (especially vendors).50 Thus in Harvey v Facey51 a telegram stating ‘Lowest cash price for Bumper Hall Pen £900’ sent in reply to a telegram asking ‘Will you sell us Bumper Hall Pen [a farm]? Telegraph lowest cash price’, was held not to be an offer. The mere statement of the lowest price the vendor would accept contained no implied promise to sell at that price. [3-10] Application for shares or debentures. A person applying, in response to a prospectus, for the issue of shares or debentures in a company is regarded as making an offer, which the company must accept before any contract arises. The reason the prospectus is regarded as an invitation to treat is that the directors of the company are taken to reserve the right (indeed such a right is usually expressly stated) to reject applications in the event of an over-subscription. But in appropriate circumstances this may not be the correct inference. Thus in Re Mount Tomah Blue Metals Ltd52 a company in financial difficulties sent a circular to existing shareholders appealing for funds (in respect of which debentures were to be issued to secure the amounts advanced) to enable the company to make an arrangement with creditors in an attempt to avoid liquidation proceedings. It was held in these circumstances that the sending of the circular was an offer, which had been accepted by those shareholders who had responded by sending money to the company. [3-11] Auction sales. It is well established that an auctioneer who puts property up for sale is not offering to sell but is issuing a request for bids. Each bid made at the auction is an offer, and no contract is formed until the auctioneer accepts the highest bid by ‘knocking down’ the goods and declaring them sold.53 It follows that until acceptance any bid may be withdrawn under the principle that
an offer can be withdrawn at any time [page 50] prior to acceptance.54 This rule is now codified in the sale of goods legislation.55 It also follows, as was held in Harris v Nickerson56 that an advertisement of an auction sale is simply a declaration of intention to hold the sale, not an offer binding the auctioneer to any prospective purchaser who claims compensation for expenses wasted in travelling to the sale only to find that the sale is cancelled. Some doubt exists, however, where an auction sale is stated to be ‘without reserve’, that is, where the property is to be sold to the highest bidder and no right is reserved by the seller to withdraw the property if the bidding does not reach the minimum reserve price (set in advance but not normally communicated to the bidders).57 The above rules would indicate that the highest bidder has no remedy if the property is not knocked down to him or her, despite the fact that the failure to do so would amount to a disregard by the auctioneer of the condition as to the sale being without reserve. However, in Barry v Davies58 the highest bidder at an auction for goods advertised for sale on a ‘without reserve’ basis, had a contractual claim against the auctioneer. Basically, Mr Barry went to an auction to bid for some ‘engine analysers’, which had an approximate value of £14,000 each. The auctioneer stated the auction would be without reserve. Mr Barry was the only bidder and bid £200 per machine. The auctioneer refused to accept such a low bid and later the machines were sold for £750 each. Mr Barry successfully sued the auctioneer for breach of contract and recovered £27,600 in damages. Prior to Barry v Davies, Warlow v Harrison59 was the leading case. There, the plaintiff bid at an auction sale which was advertised to be without reserve. A higher bid was made but the plaintiff, on being advised that the bidder was in fact the owner, refused to bid further, and the lot was knocked down to the owner. The plaintiff sued the auctioneer claiming damages, arguing that the auctioneer was in breach of a duty owed by him to the plaintiff. This argument depended on a contract for the sale of the horse having arisen, but it was held that as the horse had never been knocked down to the plaintiff, under the rule in Payne v Cave, no contract of sale had ever arisen. However, the majority of the Court of Exchequer Chamber considered that the plaintiff would have succeeded if he had alleged a separate contract where the auctioneer promised that the
[page 51] sale should be without reserve. On this reasoning a contract is formed between the auctioneer and the highest bona fide bidder.60 The majority of the Court of Appeal in Barry v Davies agreed with this approach. A number of difficulties arise out of the reasoning in Warlow v Harrison. It is difficult to see what consideration the highest bidder supplies for the promise of the auctioneer. Also, the court in Warlow v Harrison appeared to consider that the auctioneer is under no liability unless the auction is actually commenced and the conditions of sale breached, and this point was relied upon in Harris v Nickerson when it was held that a complete failure to hold an advertised auction gives no contractual claim to a disappointed bidder. It is difficult to see any ground of policy why a distinction should be made between the two cases. However, although Warlow v Harrison has been criticised,61 it has never been overruled and its reasoning was in fact applied by the Victorian Supreme Court in Ulbrick v Laidlaw.62 In that case the plaintiff and another bidder each made the same bid but the auctioneer did not see the plaintiff’s bid and knocked the property down to the other bidder. Despite a term in the conditions of sale governing the auction that in the event of a dispute between purchasers the property would be put up again, the auctioneer refused to re-open the matter. It was held that the auctioneer was under a contractual obligation to any bona fide disputant to put the property up again. The other interesting point arising from Barry v Davies is the question of damages. The court assessed the bidder’s damages in the same way they would have approached an action by a buyer against a seller for failure to deliver goods. It may be that there is a contract between the auctioneer and all the bidders at an auction, and the general measure of damages should be the loss of chance63 of being the highest bidder. [3-12] Tenders. Companies wanting to purchase bulk supplies of goods (often to be delivered in instalments) over a lengthy period of time will often advertise requesting tenders from potential suppliers. Contracts for the carrying out of building or engineering works are also very frequently entered into in this way, as are many contracts with government bodies. Tendering may also be selected as the means by which a vendor is to sell goods. The person calling for tenders will usually give instructions (called the specifications) as to the form which the tender is to take and as to the matters to be covered by the tender. The specifications can be very lengthy documents and, especially in the practice of
many government authorities, may contain detailed standard terms of contract to be agreed to by the tenderer. Persons wishing to tender are normally required to submit sealed tenders, which are not opened until after the time for lodging of tenders has [page 52] passed. It is well established that, even though the form of the tender and its detailed conditions may have been drawn up by the person calling for tenders, that person does not in so doing normally make any offer to prospective tenderers. Each tenderer has made an offer, which the offeree may then accept or reject, and the offeree is under no obligation to accept any tender. In Meudell v Mayor etc of Bendigo64 a municipal council called for tenders for the loan to the council of money, to be secured by the issue of debentures, and stated that tenders of the highest premium would have preference and debentures might be allotted proportionately to tenderers of even rates. It was held that the plaintiff had no cause of action when his tender was not accepted, even though the amount tendered for by others at rates higher than or equal to that offered by the plaintiff did not equal the total amount for which tenders were invited. In Meudell’s case there was language in the prospectus for the loan which pointed to the council reserving a right to refuse to accept any tender. This right is usually expressly reserved when tenders are invited. It would seem, however, that it is not strictly necessary for this right to be reserved. Thus, in Spencer v Harding65 tenders were invited for the purchase of goods and it was held that, although nothing had been said on the point in the document calling for tenders, the seller was not bound to sell to the person submitting the highest tender. It was suggested in Spencer v Harding that in the event of the person advertising for tenders promising to accept the most favourable tender, the advertisement could be regarded as an offer which had been accepted by the highest (in the case of a sale) or lowest (in the case of the supply of goods or performing of services) tenderer.66 Until very recently the point appeared not to have arisen for decision, no doubt because of the almost invariable practice of expressly reserving the right not to accept any tender, but a similar result could perhaps be reached by analogy with the cases on auctions without reserve discussed in the previous paragraph. In fact the process of entering into a contract by way of competitive
tender is very similar to making a sale by way of auction, and it would be difficult to distinguish the two cases in principle. On the somewhat unusual facts of Harvela Investments Ltd v Royal Trust Company of Canada (CI) Ltd,67 where two parties were invited to make sealed competitive bids for shares on certain terms and it was stated that the sellers bound themselves to accept the highest bid, it was recently held that the seller was bound to the highest bidder. Equally, in particular circumstances the facts may indicate a contractual commitment as to how the evaluation of tenders will be carried out.68 [page 53] [3-13] Self-service stores. It has for long been assumed, following the principles discussed above, that the display of goods in a shop does not amount to an offer by the shopkeeper to sell, but merely to an invitation to treat. It was not, however, until the decision in Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain v Boots Cash Chemists (Southern) Ltd69 that it was decided that the rule was the same where goods were displayed and customers could select the items which they wished to purchase. The defendants were charged with a breach of legislation requiring the sale of certain medicines to be supervised by a registered pharmacist. Supervision was provided at the cashier’s desk where customers purchased the goods. It was held that the display of goods in this manner amounted only to an invitation to customers to make an offer to buy, and that as such an offer was accepted at the cashier’s desk no infringement had occurred. The reasoning applied by the court in the Boots case has been criticised.70 The major reason the court did not think that displaying goods amounted to an offer was that such an approach would mean a customer had accepted the ‘offer’ on picking up an item and could then technically be in breach of contract if he or she later decided to buy a substitute item or not to buy at all.71 However, if the shopkeeper was in fact to be regarded as making an offer, the most natural inference would surely be that the customer had not finally indicated an intention to buy (and thus to accept the offer) until the item was presented at the cashier’s desk (or, possibly, until it was actually paid for).72 Despite such criticisms, the rule that it is the customer who makes an offer in a self-service store appears now to be established, and may perhaps be justified on the basis that in the absence of a very clear indication of contrary intention the shopkeeper should not be assumed to have relinquished the right to refuse to sell to customers, or to limit the number of items in short supply which will be sold to each customer.
This does illustrate the difficulties which may arise in everyday situations in determining who is the offeror and who is the offeree. [3-14] Meaning of ‘offer’ in statutory offences. Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain v Boots Cash Chemists (Southern) Ltd73 shows that the contractual principles of offer and acceptance may be thought to have practical significance in situations involving no action for breach of contract. A number of English cases have been concerned with the meaning to be given to the word ‘offer’ in the context of statutory offences prohibiting a person from offering goods for sale in certain circumstances, [page 54] and in those cases it has been held that parliament must be assumed to have used the word in its technical contractual meaning, rather than in its broader colloquial sense. Consequently it has been held that such statutes were not infringed where goods were displayed for sale in a shop window,74 or advertised in a newspaper,75 or offered for sale by an auctioneer.76 Such cases illustrate the contractual principles relevant in certain typical situations. Nonetheless, it is very doubtful whether as a matter of policy such technicality is desirable, since when decisions thwart the legislative intention legislation becomes unnecessarily complicated as amendments are made to override such decisions.77 The courts in Australia seem to read phrases like ‘offer for sale’ in their ordinary sense, unless a technical meaning is clearly required, and so it is unlikely that the English cases referred to would be followed in Australia. Thus, in Goodwin’s of Newtown Pty Ltd v Gurry78 it was held that in the context of legislation designed to regulate retail shopping hours the word ‘offer’ must be read in its everyday sense, and in Attorney-General (NSW) v Mutual Home Loan Fund of Australia Ltd79 it was held that the word, when appearing in legislation regulating advertisements offering to sell shares in a company, must be read in a non-contractual sense as including invitations to treat. [3-15] Invitations to treat and bait advertising. Since offering goods for sale is interpreted as being merely an invitation to treat, consumers will normally have no contractual protection where there is ‘bait advertising’. This expression refers to the practice of advertising goods at attractive bargain prices, when the advertiser does not intend to sell more than minimal quantities, if at all. Often the advertiser wants to persuade customers to purchase other more expensive
(and, to the seller, more profitable) items. Sometimes customers will be told that the advertised item is not available at all, whereas in other cases that item may be made available only to the persistent customer. The practice (‘bait advertising’) of advertising goods at attractive bargain prices, which the advertiser does not in fact intend to sell in more than minimal quantities, if at all, is prohibited by s 35 of the Australian Consumer Law.80 Thus, a person incurring expense in travelling to an advertised sale might now be able to recover damages, even though there would be no contractual claim to recover such damages.81 [page 55]
Offers to Unascertained Persons [3-16] Offer to public at large. An offer is normally addressed to a specific identified person or persons. However, an offer may be made to the public at large. Bowen LJ in Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co82 explained how these offers work. It was also said that the contract is made with all the world — that is, with everybody; and that you cannot contract with everybody. It is not a contract made with all the world … It is an offer made to all the world; and why should not an offer be made to all the world which is to ripen into a contract with anybody who comes forward and performs the condition? It is an offer to become liable to any one who, before it is retracted, performs the condition, and, although the offer is made to the world, the contract is made with that limited portion of the public who come forward and perform the condition on the faith of the advertisement.
Although it is convenient to refer to an offer made to a large group of unascertained persons as an ‘offer to the world’, the exact scope of the offer depends on the language used. So an offer may be restricted to certain classes of person, or it may be expressed in general terms but subject to the exclusion of a specific category of persons.83 In Westminster Estates Pty Ltd v Calleja84 it was argued that the principle that an offer may be made to unascertained persons was restricted to the ‘advertisement’ cases. Helsham J held, however, that the principle is of general operation, so that an offer to ‘A or his nominee’ is effective and may be accepted by the nominee once appointed, even though the nominee’s identity was not ascertainable at the time the offer was made.
Necessity for Communication of Offer [3-17] Offer ineffective until communicated. An offer is ineffective until it is communicated to the offeree. Thus, for example, Kay LJ stated in Henthorn v Fraser85 that ‘an offer to sell is nothing until it is actually received’. It might be asked whether such a rule has any practical significance, unless it refers to the rule86 that the performance of an act in ignorance of an offer cannot amount to acceptance even though the act performed happens to fulfil precisely the conditions laid down in the offer. In such a case the parties have not come to any agreement. However, the rule does have further significance, for example, B may hear from C that A intends to make an offer to him or her. Even though A may express an intention to make an offer to B, no power of acceptance is created in B until A’s offer is communicated to B by A or by someone acting with A’s [page 56] authority.87 The natural inference in such a situation would be that until such communication has occurred, A has not finally decided to be exposed to the potential liability which would arise once the offer becomes effective. Thus in Banks v Williams88 it was held that the Minister for Public Instruction decision to approve the purchase of certain goods was not an offer capable of acceptance when it was communicated without authority by the Under Secretary of the Minister’s Department.
Acceptance What Amounts to Acceptance [3-18] Necessity for acceptance. Where an offer has been made, a contract binding the parties will result when the offeree has clearly accepted the offer. Normally acceptance is not effective until it has been communicated to the offeror, and this requirement will be considered later. What sort of consent to the contract will be an effective acceptance? Generally the consent will be expressed but, as we have seen,89 consent will sometimes be implied from the acceptor’s
conduct. [3-19] Acceptance must correspond with offer. The offer and acceptance must precisely correspond; the acceptor (‘offeree’) must have accepted all the terms of the offer. Any departure from the offer will result in the purported acceptance being ineffective. Such a purported acceptance will normally, even though worded as an acceptance, amount to a new offer (described as a ‘counter-offer’). If a counter-offer is accepted by the original offeror (now the offeree in respect of the counter-offer), a contract will be formed.90 Of course, if the counter-offer itself is not accepted, neither party is bound. [3-20] Acceptance must be unequivocal. Acceptance must be unequivocal in that nothing further is left to be negotiated between the parties and the language used must clearly convey a decision by the offeree to be bound by the terms of the offer.91 Whether this has been in fact done involves interpreting the language used by the offeree. Even if the offeree does not say ‘I accept your offer’, it is sufficient if there is a clear indication that he or she is treating the offer as accepted, for example, by informing [page 57] the offeror that goods or materials have been ordered to commence performance of the bargain.92 If a party states a ‘desire’ or ‘intention’ to accept an offer, this may indicate that the party has definitely bound itself rather than stating an intention to do so in the future.93 On the other hand, it has been held that where a telegram which indicated an intention to accept stated that a letter would be sent containing details of the offeree’s position, the telegram was not intended to be a binding acceptance.94 [3-21] Offers presenting alternatives. Although acceptance must correspond exactly with the offer, an offer may present several alternatives to the offeree. Where an offer is made for the sale of a specified number of shares in a company, a purported acceptance in respect of part only will be ineffective, though such an acceptance would be valid if the offer were to sell those shares or such lesser number as the purchaser might wish.95 Similarly, if the owner of land writes to a person offering in the alternative to sell or lease the land on certain terms, a reply agreeing to purchase is clearly a valid acceptance.96 [3-22] Additional or different terms. Perhaps the most common situation
where a purported acceptance is ineffective and operates merely as a counteroffer is where the ‘acceptance’ proposes one or more terms which are in addition to, or different from, those contained in the offer. A purported acceptance which agrees to the offer in general terms but which seeks to qualify the scope of some of the detailed provisions contained in it is at most a counter-offer.97 Thus an offer for the purchase of land is not rendered binding by an ‘acceptance’ which contains terms not contained in the offer; and this will be so even if the terms (for example, a requirement that the purchaser pay a deposit) are normally agreed to in that type of transaction.98 On the other hand, an acceptance would be effective if it did not depart from the terms of the offer but simply set out expressly what would be implied by law in the absence of express agreement. Difficulty arises where an offeree who is alleged to have accepted has described the effect of the offer, for in such cases it will often be arguable that the words used by the offeree would produce a different effect from those used in the offer. The problem was described by Gibbs J in the context of a purported exercise of an option, yet his words are of general application:99 [page 58] [It] is not always easy to determine whether the purported exercise of an option should be understood as attempting to vary the terms of the option or as intending to accept its terms without modification, notwithstanding that they may have been misdescribed, or notwithstanding that the grantee of the option may have indicated that he intends to perform the contract in a manner for which the terms of the option do not provide. It must of course depend upon the proper construction of the document by which the grantee purports to exercise an option whether it amounts to an absolute and unqualified acceptance of the rights and liabilities conditionally created by the option.
The question is always whether the alleged acceptance should be interpreted as an unqualified acceptance of the offer. It is possible that a reference to an additional term should be read as a proposal for the modification of the agreement, but that the maker of the statement intends to be immediately bound whether or not the modification is agreed to by the other party. For example, in J B Rogers Ltd v Harry Lesnie Ltd100 directors of the plaintiff and defendant companies agreed to a one-year contract. At the same time they agreed that the defendant submit a proposal for an option for the renewal of the contract to the plaintiff. However, the director conducting the negotiations on behalf of the plaintiff had no authority to agree to that aspect. It was held that in the circumstances the parties intended to be immediately bound by the initial contract, irrespective of whether the option proposal were accepted.101 In other
cases an acceptance will be effective even though accompanied by a request for some indulgence as to the manner in which the obligations under the contract are to be performed. For example, a request by a buyer in an acceptance that delivery be made on a certain date will not prevent the acceptance being effective if it is clear that the acceptance is not made conditional upon the seller agreeing to that date.102 However, an acceptance conditional upon the offeror’s agreement to any variation from the terms of the offer will be ineffective. In Northland Airlines Ltd v Dennis Ferranti Meters Ltd103 a telegram purporting to accept an offer for the sale of an aeroplane required delivery to be made within 30 days. As the offer said nothing concerning the date of delivery, the seller would have been obliged to deliver within a reasonable time.104 In the circumstances of this case 30 days was not a reasonable time, and the buyer’s requirement of delivery within that time prevented his telegram taking effect as an acceptance, even though the parties did not consider the date of delivery to be important. In other words, any variation in the effect of the offer (and not, as seems sometimes to be assumed, only a material or important variation) prevents a contract being formed. It is otherwise where the [page 59] variation is solely in favour of the offeror. In Ex parte Fealey105 the defendant placed an order for insertion of a half-inch advertisement in the plaintiff’s newspaper. The plaintiff accepted by inserting a one-inch advertisement. As the rate for one inch was the same as for half an inch it was held that the defendant was liable for the cost of the advertisement.106 [3-23] Standing offers. We have seen107 that persons submitting tenders will be regarded as making an offer, which the person requesting tenders is then free to accept or reject. Many difficulties occur in practice as to the precise effect of an ‘acceptance’ of a tender. If, on interpretation of the specifications and tender it appears that the acceptor is definitely agreeing to purchase, for example, specified quantities of goods, there is no problem and both parties are bound. However, what at first sight appears to be a definite agreement may on closer examination turn out to be merely what is generally called a ‘standing offer’. For example, in Colonial Ammunition Co v Reid108 the plaintiff promised to supply the government with ammunition on certain terms for a period of seven years.
When the government subsequently purchased ammunition from another supplier, the plaintiff sued alleging a breach of contract. There was no express promise in the agreement that the government would purchase from the plaintiff all the ammunition it required. The court refused to imply such a promise, with the result that despite the ‘acceptance’ of the plaintiff’s promise there was no binding contract. The plaintiff’s promise amounted to a standing offer, such that a contract was formed each time a specific order was placed in accordance with its terms. There was, however, no obligation on the government to place any order and although bound by any orders previously placed, the plaintiff could have withdrawn his offer at any time, despite his promise to keep it open for seven years. In this respect a standing offer is as freely revocable as any other offer.109 Often the language used and the circumstances of the case will indicate that the person accepting the tender, while not bound to take any stated quantity of what is being offered, does agree to take all of his or her requirements of the goods or services offered. In that case the acceptor is bound to take his or her actual requirements from the successful tenderer and will be liable in breach of contract upon dealing elsewhere. As a corollary, the tenderer is also bound to supply in accordance with the other’s requirements.110 For example, in Milne v Municipal Council of Sydney111 the plaintiff agreed to do all the mechanical repairs required to [page 60] the defendant’s electrical plant for a period of 12 months at specified rates of payment. Although it was impossible to say at the date of contract precisely what work would need to be performed, the obligations of the parties were sufficiently defined and there were indications in the written agreement that both parties regarded themselves as bound for the period of 12 months. In these circumstances the High Court of Australia implied a promise by the defendant to employ the plaintiff to the exclusion of other persons to do those repairs. The plaintiff’s promise was more than simply a standing offer. A supplier of goods may, as a matter of commercial convenience and efficiency, supply to a regular customer a price list indicating the supplier’s current prices of goods. Unless there is an agreement by the customer to order either a minimum quantity or the actual requirements for the customer’s own
business, the arrangement amounts only to a standing offer. The distinction between a standing offer and a contract binding both parties is clear enough in principle, but in practice can give rise to problems of interpretation in ascertaining the true intention of the parties. [3-24] The battle of the forms. The increasing use of standard forms in business dealings gives rise to what is known as ‘the battle of the forms’. For example, in negotiations for the sale of goods the buyer and seller may each use their own printed forms setting out the terms on which they propose to deal. As each party’s form will be drafted to protect its own interests, the forms will almost inevitably conflict on some points, and this may produce quite unexpected results. In Butler Machine Tool Co Ltd v Excell-O Corp (England) Ltd112 a seller quoted a price for certain machinery subject to the seller’s own conditions (which included a clause enabling the seller to vary the price of the machinery in certain circumstances). The buyer subsequently requested the supply of the machinery, using its own order form containing its own terms. The seller acknowledged this order on a form of acknowledgment of order supplied by the buyer. When the seller later claimed to be entitled to an increased payment in reliance on its price variation clause, it was held that as the buyer’s order form contained no such clause, that order was not an acceptance but a counter-offer, which had been accepted by the seller. The seller was therefore bound by the buyer’s terms. Where the seller does not acknowledge the buyer’s counteroffer, it may well be held to have been accepted by conduct if the goods in question are later supplied.113 In other cases where a dispute arises before the seller supplies the goods it may be held that no contract exists at all.114 This result can in some situations be particularly harsh, especially when the parties have agreed on all essentials and the variations between the competing sets of conditions are relatively minor. Consequently in some overseas jurisdictions a purported acceptance which contains terms which are different from those in the offer is effective as an acceptance if those new terms do not ‘materially alter’ the terms of the offer; the new terms are treated as [page 61] proposals for additions to the contract which the offeror will be deemed to have agreed to if they are not expressly objected to.115 It seems clear that such an
approach is inconsistent with the principles of formation of contract applied by the Australian courts,116 though its adoption would prevent a party being able to escape from a contract on the basis of a minor variation between the forms employed by the parties.117 It would in practice, however, often be extremely difficult to distinguish between new terms which were only ‘minor’ and those which ‘materially altered’ the terms of the original offer.
Who May Accept? [3-25] Offer may be accepted only by offeree. An offer may be accepted only by the person or persons to whom it is addressed.118 So if an offer is made by A to B, and B purports to accept on behalf of herself and C, no contract results and B’s action is not an acceptance but a counteroffer.119 In most cases it will be clear enough who is entitled to accept, but where doubt arises the offer must be carefully construed to ascertain who is entitled to accept.120 Thus where two directors of a company offered, in a circular addressed to shareholders, to sell their shares in the company, it was necessary to construe the terms of the offer to ascertain whether the offer could be accepted only by the shareholders acting as a group, or whether it was open to acceptance by any individual shareholder.121
Communication of Acceptance [3-26] Acceptance effective on communication. An acceptance is generally effective to conclude a contract only when the fact of acceptance is communicated to the offeror. Until then the offeror can withdraw the offer. It is normally only when the offeror knows that the proposal has been [page 62] accepted that the parties have reached agreement. For example, a person who makes an offer to a company to purchase shares in that company may withdraw that offer before being notified of the company’s acceptance, even if the company has already allotted shares to the offeror in the company’s share register.122 On the other hand, it is not necessary that a formal notice of allotment be given, and knowledge of the allotment may be inferred from the
conduct of the parties, for example, by the company sending to the applicant a notice of a call in respect of money due for the shares or by the applicant participating in a meeting of shareholders.123 An offeror may have authorised an agent to receive notification of acceptance, and so notice to the agent is treated as the equivalent of notice to the offeror personally. The offeror is not, however, bound if the agent has authority merely to transmit the notification rather than to receive it on the offeror’s behalf.124 Unless there are special circumstances indicating that actual communication is not necessary, the fact that an offeree has not yet informed the other party of a decision to accept will usually imply that the offeree has not yet finally made a commitment. Accordingly, the offeree will not be bound even though the decision to accept has been conveyed to the offeror by someone acting without authority to do so.125 [3-27] Offeror may dispense with need for communication. The offeror may give up the requirement that the acceptance must be communicated, since the requirement is primarily in the interests of the offeror. The offeror may, expressly or by implication, specify that acceptance is to be communicated in a particular manner, in which case an acceptance communicated in that manner will be effective whether or not the communication is actually received by the offeror.126 This reasoning is one of the bases for the rule that a posted acceptance will often be effective on posting rather than on delivery.127 In many cases an offer will be interpreted as contemplating that acceptance may take the form of performance of an act rather than of the making of a counter-promise, and in such a case the offeror will be held to have dispensed with the necessity of communication of acceptance. It was on this basis that it was held in Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co128 that a contract was made as soon as the plaintiff had performed the conditions set out in the offer contained in the company’s advertisement.129 Likewise, if a person wishing to buy goods from a distant seller writes ordering the goods [page 63] and indicates that the seller can accept the offer by immediately shipping the goods without first replying, the contract is made as soon as the goods are shipped.130 The offer must clearly indicate an intention to displace the normal
rule for this to occur.131 [3-28] Method of acceptance prescribed by offeror. The offeror may prescribe the manner in which acceptance is to be made, and a purported acceptance in any other manner is not an effective acceptance. ‘The offeror creates the power of acceptance; and he has full control over the character and extent of the power that he creates.’132 For example, it has been held that the fact that the offeror has made the offer by telegram is an implied indication that a prompt reply is expected and that an acceptance sent by ordinary mail will be ineffective.133 However, in most cases when an offeror indicates that acceptance may be made in a particular manner this will not be taken to be insistence on that exclusive method of acceptance. Any alternative method of acceptance which is no less advantageous to the offeror than the prescribed method will suffice.134 Therefore an offer requesting a reply ‘by return of post’ will normally be regarded as indicating merely a requirement of a prompt reply rather than as stipulating that acceptance must be by letter and no other means. Consequently a reply by some other means, received no later than a letter by post would normally reach its destination, would comply with the terms of the offer.135 If an offeror wishes the prescribed method of acceptance to be the only method permissible, this intention must be made quite clear. But if this is done, any purported acceptance which does not comply is at best a counter-offer, which the original offeror is free either to accept or reject.136 [3-29] Silence as acceptance. Although there is little authority on the point, it seems that an offeror cannot compel an offeree to take positive steps to reject an offer. Just by stating that unless it is heard to the contrary the offer will be assumed to have been accepted will not mean that silence will amount to acceptance. If the offeree decides not to accept, and therefore simply ignores the offer, there will be no acceptance and no contract. Thus, in Felthouse v Bindley137 an uncle wrote to his nephew proposing to buy the latter’s horse and said ‘if I hear no more about him, I [page 64] consider the horse mine at £30/15/0’. The nephew did not reply, and it was held that ‘it is … clear that the uncle had no right to impose upon the nephew a sale of his horse for £30/15/0 unless he chose to comply with the condition of writing to repudiate the offer’.138 It is by no means clear, however, just how far this
principle may be taken. There is no reason in principle why parties should not be bound where they have previously dealt with each other and established an arrangement whereby an offer is taken to have been agreed to if not promptly rejected. Such an arrangement had been made in the Victorian case of Boyd v Holmes139 where the plaintiff, a merchant in China, had for some time been consigning shipments of tea to the defendant, a Melbourne merchant, who sold the tea in Melbourne on behalf of them both. The plaintiff had, before shipping the consignment in dispute, cabled the defendant details of the cost of the tea and, relying on a previous arrangement between them, took the defendant’s failure to reply as an acceptance of his proposal. The Full Court of the Victorian Supreme Court held that the arrangement relied upon by the plaintiff had in fact not been complied with as it had previously been altered so as to apply only when further particulars (such as the quantity obtainable and freight costs) were supplied by the plaintiff. The court seems, however, clearly to have assumed (as had been held by the trial judge) that had the then existing arrangement been complied with the defendant would have been bound. While it is clear that silence as such will not bind an offeree, it would seem that the offeree’s performance of some act indicating an intention to accept would suffice to bind him or her. Apart from where legislation applies (discussed below), where a seller without previous request sends goods to a person with a statement that the recipient will be assumed to have agreed to buy if the goods are not returned, the recipient will be bound if the goods are used, or dealt with, in a way that indicates an intention to buy (as, for example, by making a gift of the goods to a friend).140 Normally at least, mere silence and inactivity are equivocal141 but here the recipient has done more than simply remain silent (which does not in itself indicate a decision one way or the other) and has done something from which an intention to accept may reasonably be inferred.142 It is true that an acceptance has not been communicated to the offeror, but the offeror has clearly indicated that such notification is not expected and [page 65] we have already seen that in many cases an offeror will be taken to have dispensed with the necessity of communicating acceptance. It is difficult to reconcile such an approach with Felthouse v Bindley,143
discussed above, where it was held that no contract had been made, even though the nephew had stated to an auctioneer, whom he had employed to sell a number of horses, that the horse in question was not to be auctioned as it had already been sold to his uncle. In Felthouse v Bindley the offeree was the seller and the action of the seller in thus dealing with his own property may have been regarded as equivocal,144 but otherwise the decision seems difficult to support.145 Further, if an offeree remains silent because intending to accept, it would seem harsh if the offeree were unable to enforce the contract even though having done precisely what was requested by the offeror. In such a situation the American law would probably permit the offeree to enforce the contract,146 and it is suggested that there is no reason the same rule should not be followed by Australian courts.147 So long as the offeree is not prejudiced by becoming bound when remaining silent with no intention of accepting, the offeree is adequately protected and there is no need for a rigid insistence that silence can never result in a contract. The practice (known as ‘inertia selling’) of sending unsolicited goods to a person, accompanied by a statement that if the goods are not returned within a stated period the recipient will be taken to have agreed to buy them, has at times been very common (especially in regard to relatively small items, such as books and records, which may easily be sent by post). The practice is objectionable; for example, because people might pay for the goods in the mistaken belief that they are bound to do so. Under the Australian Consumer Law, in many circumstances the making of a demand for payment for unsolicited goods is an offence.148 Also where the sender does not collect the goods within a certain period of time, the goods become the property of the recipient, in effect as a gift. [page 66]
The Postal Acceptance Rule [3-30] Acceptance effective on posting. Perhaps the main exception to the principle that acceptance is not effective until communicated to the offeror occurs in cases where the postal acceptance rule applies. In such cases the acceptance is effective immediately a properly pre-paid and addressed letter is posted. So a contract is formed on posting even though the offeror is then ignorant of that fact, and even though the letter is delayed in transmission, or
may be lost in the post and therefore never ultimately delivered. However, just because acceptance is made by post does not mean the postal acceptance rule applies. [3-31] When rule applies. The rule only applies when the parties contemplated that acceptance would be communicated by the post. In Henthorn v Fraser,149 the principle was stated by Lord Herschell as follows: Where the circumstances are such that it must have been within the contemplation of the parties that, according to the ordinary usages of mankind, the post might be used as a means of communicating the acceptance of an offer, the acceptance is complete as soon as it is posted.
Henthorn v Fraser shows that, although the postal acceptance rule will normally arise where the offer was itself made by post, this is by no means essential. In that case the plaintiff called at the office of a firm (the defendant) with which he had been negotiating for the purchase of some houses. A written offer was then handed to him which he took away to consider. The next day he posted from the town in which he lived (which was some distance from the town in which the defendant’s office was located) a letter accepting the offer. In the meantime a letter withdrawing the offer had been posted by the defendant but was not received by the plaintiff until after he had posted his acceptance. For reasons which will be explained later, the letter of revocation could be effective only on receipt by the plaintiff (the postal acceptance rule having no application to revocation of offers)150 but nonetheless the revocation was received by the plaintiff before his acceptance letter had been delivered. There would be a contract only if his acceptance had been effective when posted, and the court held that this was the case. The offer by its terms was to remain open for 14 days,151 so an immediate reply was clearly not contemplated, and as the defendant knew that the plaintiff lived in a different town the proper inference was that both parties contemplated that if the plaintiff accepted he might do so by post. The postal acceptance rule applies to communications by telegram as well as those by letter.152 [page 67] In many (if not most) cases the parties will be ignorant of the postal acceptance rule, and the relevant question is whether it can reasonably be inferred that the parties contemplated the likelihood of acceptance by post rather than whether they contemplated the legal effect of such a method of acceptance.153
[3-32] When postal rule displaced. The postal acceptance rule is, however, always liable to be displaced by appropriate circumstances. We have already seen that an offeror has full control over the character and extent of the power of acceptance that the offer creates,154 and consequently it is always open to the offeror to indicate that acceptance will not be binding until it is communicated. This will be so if the offer stipulates that it may be accepted by ‘notice’ to the offeror within a stated period of time.155 In such cases everything depends on the correct interpretation in the circumstances of the language used, and slight differences in terminology can be of crucial significance (for example, if in the case just referred to the offer called for ‘notice posted’ or ‘acceptance in writing’ within the time limit).156 The postal acceptance rule became established against the background of assumptions that the postal service was both speedy and reliable. Since both these assumptions may no longer be true, many phrase offers exclude the operation of the rule. Often an offer will be stated to be open for a certain period of time, and no indication is given one way or the other as to whether actual notice is envisaged. It can be argued that acceptance will only be effective on receipt since the offeror set a time limit to ensure that the offeror could safely act on the basis that the offer had been rejected at the expiry of the time. However, cases seem to point to the contrary conclusion.157 Perhaps this is because it would be easy for the offeror to indicate clearly when acceptance would be effective, rather than setting a time limit.158 In some cases the nature of the subject matter may indicate that the postal acceptance rule does not apply, because its application would produce an absurd or inconvenient result.159 In Tallerman & Co Pty Ltd v Nathan’s Merchandise (Vic) Pty Ltd160 two members of the High Court were [page 68] prepared to assume that actual communication would be essential where firms of solicitors were conducting a highly contentious correspondence relating to possible settlement of a dispute over the terms of a contract previously entered into between their clients.161 It is true that ‘courts in more recent times and in the light of modern means of communication have shown no disposition to extend the [postal acceptance rule]’,162 and this point is illustrated later when the cases dealing with situations where communication is virtually instantaneous are
discussed.163 However, the application of the rule may vary with changing commercial practices. It has become increasingly common for business communications to be conveyed by means of courier services and it may be that, where communication in this manner is shown to have been contemplated by the parties (either from the manner of transmission of the offer or from practice in previous dealings between them), a letter of acceptance would be held to be effective once handed to the courier.164 The postal acceptance rule depends on the letter of acceptance having been properly pre-paid and deposited with the post office, and varying the way the post office does business (such as handing a letter to a postal worker) would mean the letter was not ‘posted’ for the purposes of the rule.165 If the offeree wrongly addresses the letter of acceptance so that it is delayed in delivery, the acceptance will not be effective until it is actually delivered. Presumably the acceptance would be effective on posting if the letter was, despite the incorrect address, in fact delivered in the normal time. The point would be important if the offeror purported to revoke while the letter was in the course of transmission. Where the delay is caused by the offeror giving a wrong or incomplete address it would seem that, at least where the error is not one which should have been obvious to the offeree, the acceptance will be effective on posting even though delivery is delayed because of the use of an incorrect address.166 [page 69] The cases holding an acceptance to have been effective on posting assume that at the time the post office remained in existence as a medium of communication between the parties’ addresses, and hence it was held in a South African case to be inapplicable when postal communication had been suspended because of war.167 The same reasoning would apply where at the time of posting it was general knowledge that postal communication was disrupted because of industrial action and a letter of acceptance was as a result delivered late. Perhaps the result would be otherwise if disruption such as a ‘go-slow’ strike had occurred before the posting of the offer and was continuing at the time of posting of the acceptance. [3-33] Acceptance lost in post. The postal acceptance rule protects the acceptor not just against the risk of delay in the acceptance being transmitted but also against the risk of it being lost and never reaching the offeror. In Household Fire
and Carriage Accident Insurance Co (Ltd) v Grant168 the defendant applied in writing for shares in the plaintiff company. A letter advising of the allotment of shares to him was posted to the defendant but was never received by him. When the company later sued to recover money owing in respect of the purchase of the shares, the defendant argued that, as he was liable only if there was a contract binding him to take the shares, the fact that he had never received notice of the acceptance of his offer was fatal. It was held that the contract had been formed on the posting of the letter of allotment. [3-34] Intermediate situations. In situations where the parties contemplate that acceptance may well be made by post but for some reason the acceptance is held not to have been effective on posting, it does not necessarily follow that the acceptance will take effect only when actually read by the offeror. If it is contemplated that acceptance will be by post, it may well be that an acceptance, though not effective on posting, will nonetheless take effect on delivery to the offeror’s address even if not actually read until some later time.169 It is not uncommon for a formal offer to make an express provision as to when acceptance will be effective. In Bowman v Durham Holdings Pty Ltd,170 for example, an option provided that any exercise of the option by mail would be deemed to have been given at the time when the letter would in the ordinary course of post be delivered. The letter was in fact not delivered until after the expiry date of [page 70] the option but, it being proved that it would in the ordinary course have been delivered on that day, it was held that the exercise of the option had been made in due time. [3-35] Justifications of the rule. The postal acceptance rule has had a somewhat controversial history. Most of the reasons given in the cases for the existence of the rule have been criticised as unsound.171 Perhaps the argument most commonly advanced initially was that the post office was the agent of the offeror (or, alternatively, the common agent of both parties) to receive the communication and that therefore the acceptance should be treated as having been communicated to the offeror upon posting.172 This reasoning was answered, in a frequently cited passage, by Kay LJ in Henthorn v Fraser:173 That reason is not satisfactory. The post office are only carriers between them. They are agents to
convey the communication, not to receive it. The communication is not made to the post office, but by their agency as carriers. The difference is between saying ‘Tell my agent A, if you accept’, and ‘Send your answer to me by A’. In the former case A is to be the intelligent recipient of the acceptance, in the latter he is only to convey the communication to the person making the offer which he may do by a letter, knowing nothing of its contents. The post office are only agents in the latter sense.
Another argument is that the acceptance is effective on posting because the offeree has then done all that can be done to communicate acceptance and should not be responsible for what might happen after losing control over the letter.174 The difficulty with this argument is that there can be other situations where circumstances beyond the offeree’s control result in the offeror being unaware of an acceptance, for example where, unknown to the offeree, a telephone line goes dead or a telex machine fails to transmit a message.175 The difficulty arises because where negotiations are carried out at a distance by use of the postal service, some time must elapse when one of the parties is ignorant of a vital fact. If acceptance is effective on posting, the offeror will be bound without knowing it until the [page 71] acceptance is received. The only other solution would be that acceptance would be effective only on receipt, and then the acceptor would be bound until becoming aware that the acceptance had been received by the offeror. The position has been described:176 One of the parties must carry the risk of loss and inconvenience. We need a definite and uniform rule as to this. We can choose either rule; but we must choose one. We can put the risk on either party; but we must not leave it in doubt. The party not carrying the risk can then act promptly and with confidence in reliance on the contract; the party carrying the risk can insure against it if he so desires. The business community could no doubt adjust itself to either rule; but the rule throwing the risk on the offeror has the merit of closing the deal more quickly and enabling performance more promptly.
One final point can be made. In many legal systems an offer made in a business context will be assumed, in the absence of express provision to the contrary, to be a firm offer which may not be revoked before the offeree has had a reasonable opportunity to accept.177 By contrast, at common law an offer, even though expressly stated to be open for a certain period of time, may always be revoked at any time prior to acceptance, unless separate consideration has been provided for an option contract.178 One effect of the postal acceptance rule is to limit the offeror’s power of revocation, especially as it is established that the rule only applies to acceptances and that a revocation by letter is effective only when communicated.179 In a number of cases the result has been that a revocation
communicated after the posting of a letter of acceptance has been held to be ineffective, and the courts have emphasised the need, where the parties are not in instantaneous communication with each other, for the acceptor to be able to act immediately on the basis that the contract is binding once the letter of acceptance is posted.180 If the law were otherwise it would always be possible that the offer might be revoked before the acceptance was delivered, and the offeree could not safely incur liabilities under the contract (as where, for example, a seller needs to purchase goods to fulfil a contract). [3-36] Postal rule and the place and time of formation of contract. We have already seen that where it applies the postal acceptance rule operates to protect the offeree against the risk of delay or loss in the transmission of a letter, and also to protect against revocation of the offer after the acceptance has been posted. The rule is also important in determining where and when a contract is made. The question of the place of a contract’s formation is often important in relation to the jurisdiction of [page 72] a court to entertain an action on the contract, and also in relation to the application of the conflict of laws rules concerning the law to be applied to contracts where the parties are in different jurisdictions.181 A contract is formed at the place where the final act regarded as completing the contract occurred. So where the postal acceptance rule applies, Australian courts will regard the contract as having been made in the place where the acceptance was posted, whereas in other cases the contract is made at the place where acceptance is communicated to the offeror.182 In other cases it will be important to fix with precision the time when a contract was made, for the calculation of the price to be paid for property sold (for example, where shares are sold by reference to the market price) or the calculation of just what is included in a sale (for example, the sale of a business at a stated price plus the value of stock in hand) may be made by reference to the date of the contract’s formation.183 Since the rule serves so many functions it has been argued one rule is not sufficient, but as yet the courts have not been convinced.184 [3-37] Withdrawal of acceptance by post. Can an offeree who posts a letter of acceptance retract the acceptance by speedier means of communication (for example, a fax or telephone call) before the letter of acceptance reaches the
offeror?185 There is little authority on the point. A Scottish case is often cited as suggesting that withdrawal of the acceptance would be effective186 whereas a New Zealand case tends to the contrary conclusion.187 A logical application of the postal acceptance rule would prevent the withdrawal having effect, and would also prevent the offeree being able to speculate at the offeror’s expense (for example, where the contract is for the purchase of property such as company shares which may fluctuate rapidly in value). On the other hand, there would seem to be little harm in allowing retraction, especially as, being unaware of the acceptance, the offeror will not have acted on it and will in fact know just what the position is at an earlier point of time.188 Even if the withdrawal of an acceptance is held in principle to be ineffective, it would obviously be unjust to hold the offeror bound if, relying on the revocation at its face value, it assumed there was no contract and altered its position (for example, by selling the goods the subject of the offer to a third party) on the [page 73] assumption that the offer had been rejected. In such a case the purported withdrawal of acceptance would no doubt be treated as either an offer to rescind the contract or a repudiation of it justifying the offeror in terminating the contract, or as giving rise to an estoppel preventing the offeree from enforcing the contract.189 [3-38] Instantaneous communication. The postal acceptance rule, while firmly established, will not be readily extended by the courts. It can be argued that wherever the parties are communicating at a distance the offeree should be held to have effectively accepted if all has been done to communicate an acceptance by approved methods. This argument was, however, rejected in Entores Ltd v Miles Far East Corp190 where, when an offer was made by telex machine from the plaintiff in London to the defendant in Holland and was accepted by the defendant by telex message, the question arose as to whether the contract was concluded in Holland or in London. The court considered that there was no justification for extending the postal acceptance rule and held that where the parties were in instantaneous communication the general rule applied that acceptance is ineffective before communicated. As a result, the contract was held to have been made in London. In the case of communication by mechanical means such as telephone, telex or fax191 communication is for all practical purposes simultaneous and hence is to be assimilated to cases where parties are
negotiating in each other’s presence.192 The Entores case was subsequently applied by the House of Lords on very similar facts, but it was pointed out that the circumstances may sometimes dictate a different result:193 Since 1955 the use of telex communication has been greatly expanded, and there are many variants on it. The senders and recipients may not be the principals to the contemplated contract. They may be servants or agents with limited authority. The message may not reach, or be intended to reach, the designated recipient immediately; messages may be sent out of office hours, or at night, with the intention, or upon the assumption, that they will be read at a later time. There may be some error or default at the recipient’s end which prevents receipt at the time contemplated and believed in by the sender. The message may have been sent and/or received through machines operated by third persons. And many other variations may occur. No universal rule can cover all such cases: they must be resolved by reference to
[page 74] the intentions of the parties, by sound business practice and in some cases by a judgment where the risks should lie.
It would follow from the above that if a person accepted an offer by telephone and because of some failure in the telephone system the acceptance was not heard by the offeror, there would be no contract at that time.194 The position in relation to email communications is still unclear.195 Indeed, electronic commerce raises many complex challenges to traditional contract analysis which have not yet been addressed in the Australian cases.196 In relation to offer and acceptance, given the variety of ways by which electronic communication may occur, universal solutions are unlikely to be found.197 Uniform legislation concerning electronic communications and transactions has been enacted.198 For example, the Electronic Transactions Act 2000 (NSW)199 validates electronic transactions, makes provision for the satisfaction by electronic means of statutory requirements of writing and signature.200 The legislation is also relevant to electronic communications201 made in connection with the formation and performance of contracts.202 The legislation supplies rules that apply if the parties have not agreed otherwise. Section 13(1) of the Electronic Transactions Act 2000 (NSW) [page 75]
relevantly provides that the time of dispatch of an electronic communication is the time when it leaves an information system203 under the control of the originator. Alternatively, if it has not left an information system under the control of the originator, the time of dispatch is the time when the electronic communication is received by the addressee.204 The time of receipt is stated in s 13A(1) as being the time when the electronic communication becomes capable of being retrieved by the addressee at an electronic address designated by the addressee.205 The time of receipt of the electronic communication at another electronic address of the addressee is the time when both: the electronic communication has become capable of being retrieved by the addressee at that address; and the addressee has become aware that the electronic communication has been sent to that address. The place of dispatch and place of receipt are dealt with in s 13B(1) of the Electronic Transactions Act 2000 (NSW).206 The electronic communication is taken to have been: dispatched at the place where the originator has its place of business; and received at the place where the addressee has its place of business. Part 2A of the Electronic Transactions Act 2000 (NSW) states certain additional provisions which apply to contracts.207 Under s 14B(1), a proposal to form a contract made through one or more electronic communications which is not addressed to one or more specific parties, and is generally accessible to parties making use of information systems, is an invitation to treat unless it clearly indicates the intention of the party making the proposal to be bound in case of acceptance.208 Section 14C provides that a contract formed by the interaction of an automated message system209 and a natural person or the interaction of automated message systems is not invalid, void or unenforceable on the sole ground that no natural person reviewed or intervened in each of the individual actions carried out by the automated message systems or the resulting contract. [page 76]
Under s 14D(2) of the Electronic Transactions Act 2000 (NSW), if a natural person makes an input error in an electronic communication (for example, in the acceptance of an offer) exchanged with the automated message system of another party and the automated message system does not provide the person with an opportunity to correct the error, there is a right to withdraw the portion of the electronic communication in which the input error was made if two requirements are met.210 First the party who made the error in the electronic communication notifies the other party of the error as soon as possible after having learned of the error and indicates that he or she made an error. The second is that the person who made the error has not used or received any material benefit or value from the goods or services, if any, received from the other party. But the right to withdraw is not of itself a right to rescind or terminate a contract (s 14D(3)), and the consequences of the exercise of the right of withdrawal must be determined in accordance with any applicable rule of law (s 14D(4)).
The Requirement of Knowledge [3-39] Necessity of knowledge of offer. Acceptance cannot occur if the offeree is ignorant of the offer. Consequently, where an offer is made for a reward to be paid in return for the performing of some act (for example, the supplying of information relating to the commission of a crime), the mere fact that a person by chance happens to perform that act while ignorant of the offer will not result in a binding contract. Unless the person performing the act called for is ‘acting on or in pursuance of or in reliance upon or in return for’211 the consideration contained in the offer, the parties cannot be said in even the most extended sense to have reached an agreement capable of having contractual effect. It seems that no contract would result if two offers in identical terms should happen to cross in the post, each party being unaware of the offer of the other.212 Where an offer calls for acceptance by the performance of an act, it may be that a person commences performance in ignorance of the offer but becomes aware of it before completing performance. In such a case, continued performance would be assumed to be at least partly motivated by the offer, and so in the absence of any contrary intention indicated by the offeror, there would be a binding contract once the performance was complete.213 [3-40] Is knowledge sufficient? A more difficult question is whether, once it is shown that a person was aware of an offer and subsequently performed the act
requested by the offeror, it necessarily follows that agreement has been reached. In R v Clarke214 a reward was offered by the Western Australian government ‘for such information as shall lead to the [page 77] arrest and conviction of the person or persons’ who committed the murders of two police officers. Clarke, who knew of the offer, gave information that led to the arrest of one person and the conviction of that person and another for the murder of one of the officers. There is considerable doubt as to whether Clarke had in any event brought himself within the terms of the offer,215 but the case was not decided on this point. The trial judge had found that, on Clarke’s own evidence, he had given the information only after his own arrest in order to save himself from an unfounded charge of one of the murders. The High Court of Australia held that there was no justification for interfering with this finding and that as Clarke had not performed the conditions of the offer acting on the faith of or in reliance on the offer, no contract resulted and he was not entitled to the reward. In reaching this conclusion the court had to distinguish Williams v Carwardine,216 another case involving the offer of a reward for information leading to the discovery of the persons who committed a particular murder. The jury found that the plaintiff gave the necessary information not for the sake of the reward but to ease her guilty conscience. It seems clear that the plaintiff was aware of the offer,217 and the significance of the decision therefore lies in the fact that she was held entitled to recover although her motive in giving the information was not to obtain the reward. The principle to be applied in such cases was well stated by Starke J in Rv Clarke:218 …[U]nless a person performs the conditions of the offer, acting upon its faith or in reliance on it, he does not accept the offer and the offeror is not bound to him. As a matter of proof any person knowing of the offer who performs its conditions establishes prima facie an acceptance of that offer … It is an inference of fact and may be excluded by evidence … The statements or conduct of the party himself uncommunicated to the other party, or the circumstances of the case, may supply that evidence. Ordinarily, it is true, the law judges of the intention of a person in making a contract by outward expression only by words or acts communicated between them … But when the offeror, as in the anomalous case under consideration, has dispensed with any previous communication to himself of the acceptance of the offer the law is deprived of one of the means by which it judges of the intention of the parties, and the performance of the conditions of the offer is not in all cases conclusive for they may have been performed by one who never hears of the offer or who never intended to accept it.
The court in R v Clarke considered that Clarke’s own evidence was sufficient
to rebut the prima facie inference which arose upon proof of knowledge of the offer followed by the performance by him of the conditions of the offer. Higgins J relied on the fact that Clarke had admitted that although he had seen the offer, he had forgotten it at the time [page 78] when he gave the information. ‘Ignorance of the offer is the same thing whether it is due to never hearing of it or to forgetting it after hearing.’219 The case is sometimes regarded as having turned on this point, but Isaacs ACJ and Starke J do not appear to have regarded the evidence as going as far. Although they considered that Clarke must be treated as having been aware of the offer at the relevant time, they nonetheless concluded that his admission as to his motives in giving the information totally displaced any intention on his part to claim the reward.220 The distinction between R v Clarke and Williams v Carwardine then comes down to a difference in the weight of the evidence in the two cases. In R v Clarke Isaacs ACJ221 regarded Williams v Carwardine as being a doubtful case on its facts but one where a majority at least of the court considered that the motive of the informant in giving the information was not totally inconsistent with an intention also to claim the reward. All of the members of the court in R v Clarke appear to have agreed that any person knowing of an offer who subsequently performs its conditions prima facie establishes an acceptance of the offer.222 In subsequent Australian cases this point has, however, given rise to some controversy. In Dalgety Australia Ltd v Harris223 Glass JA held that there can be no such general proposition and that each case requires an individual examination of the facts to see whether the conduct relied upon both as acceptance and performance was actuated by the offer at least in part. He instanced the case where the conduct might be explicable by reference to a contract with a third party. This view was repeated by Glass JA, and was adopted by Hutley JA, in Salmond & Spraggon (Australia) Pty Ltd v Joint Cargo Services Pty Ltd.224 On appeal to the High Court Mason and Jacobs JJ (and apparently Barwick CJ) considered this approach to be incorrect,225 and it is suggested that in Australia the matter must now be regarded as settled. [3-41] Should acceptance be required in reward cases? Not all legal systems approach the question of reward offers to the public as raising questions of
contract law. In German law, for example, such an offer is regarded as a unilateral juristic act immediately binding on the offeror and not requiring acceptance.226 A person giving the requested information is therefore entitled to the reward even though being at the time totally ignorant of the offer. The argument for this approach is that the offeror has received what was asked for and there is no reason that it should not be paid for. [page 79]
Duration of Offers [3-42] Offer ceasing to be effective. A purported acceptance may fail to create a contract because the offer has ceased to be effective. This may have occurred for a number of reasons including: lapse of time positive withdrawal by the offeror rejection failure of a condition. Another way of explaining the point is that acceptance must take place within the period of duration of the power of acceptance created by the offeror in making the offer. A purported acceptance occurring outside of this period can at best be a counter-offer.
Revocation [3-43] Offer may be revoked prior to acceptance. Except for the case where the parties have entered into an option contract,227 an offer may be withdrawn or revoked by the offeror at any time before it has been accepted. For example, there are many cases where someone has applied to purchase shares in a company and has been entitled to withdraw the offer before the company had accepted by giving a notice of allotment of the shares.228 The offeror may revoke even though the offer expressly states that it is to remain open for a specified period of time which has not, at the time of revocation, expired.229 [3-44] Communication of revocation. Revocation is made effective by the
offeree being informed that the offeror does not want to proceed with the contract. Any clear indication of this intention is sufficient. In Financings Ltd v Stimson230 the defendant had made an offer to enter into a hire-purchase agreement with a finance company. The defendant then decided not to go ahead but he did not expressly revoke his offer because he believed incorrectly that his offer had already been accepted. He did, however, make it clear that he did not wish to proceed with the transaction and it was held that he had revoked his offer even though the actual language used by him was more appropriate to a case of rescission of a previously concluded contract. Revocation is not effective until communicated to the offeree (or someone who is authorised by the offeree to receive such communications).231 It is important to remember that the postal [page 80] acceptance rule applies only to acceptances and never renders a revocation effective on posting. So, where the postal acceptance rule applies an acceptance will be effective on posting even though before that time the offeror has sent a letter revoking the offer.232 Of course, there can be no contract if the offeree has received the letter of revocation before posting an acceptance. This rule has been justified on the following basis:233 If the defendants’ contention were to prevail no person who had received an offer by post and had accepted it would know his position until he had waited such a time as to be quite sure that a letter withdrawing the offer had not been posted before his acceptance of it. It appears to me that both legal principles, and practical convenience require that a person who has accepted an offer not known to him to have been revoked, shall be in a position safely to act upon the footing that the offer and acceptance constitute a contract binding on both parties.
Although a revocation of an offer is ineffective unless communicated to the offeree, it is not essential that the communication be made by the offeror (or even by someone acting with the authority of the offeror). In Dickinson v Dodds234 the defendant offered on Wednesday to sell a property to the plaintiff, the offer being left open until 9 am the next Friday. The plaintiff was then told by a third party that the defendant ‘had been offering or agreeing to sell’ the property to someone else, so the plaintiff attempted to accept the offer. It was held that the plaintiff must have been aware that the defendant no longer wanted to sell to him and that his acceptance was ineffective as it occurred after the offer had been revoked. The decision itself is unsatisfactory in a number of respects.
There is some language in the judgments suggesting that the mere fact of sale, unknown to the offeree, might be sufficient to revoke the offer. While consistent with a subjective theory of contractual agreement, the later cases apply an objective approach235 and make it plain that knowledge of revocation by the offeree is essential,236 and the judgments in Dickinson v Dodds do in fact emphasise that the plaintiff was aware of the offeror’s change of heart. Another unsatisfactory feature of the decision is that there was apparently no evidence as to how the third party had come to know of the defendant’s actions. His information that the defendant was ‘offering or agreeing to sell’ would seem to be at least consistent with the making of an offer not at that stage accepted which was not necessarily inconsistent with the offer previously made to the plaintiff remaining on foot. Nonetheless, the court considered that on the facts (which are perhaps imperfectly summarised in the report) the plaintiff must have been as clearly aware of [page 81] the withdrawal of the offer as if he had been told so directly by the defendant. The issue in such cases must ultimately be the correct inference that should be drawn from the facts. The court must consider the effect which the information conveyed to the offeree should reasonably have had, and the following comment from the American Restatement summarises the relevant considerations:237 [M]ere negotiations with a third person, or even a definite offer to a second offeree, may be consistent with an intention on the part of the offeror to honor an acceptance by the original offeree. Even a binding contract with a third person may be expressly subject to any rights arising under the outstanding offer. Moreover, a mere rumor does not terminate the power of acceptance, if the offeree disbelieves it and is reasonable in doing so, even though the rumor is later verified. The basic standard to which the offeree is held is that of a reasonable person acting in good faith.
[3-45] Revocation of multiple offers. The fact that revocation is ineffective unless communicated means that an offeror who offers property for sale to a number of different persons at the same time may be in trouble if more than one person accepts. In Patterson v Dolman238 A posted to B an offer to sell certain goods and also offered to sell the same goods to C. Both B and C posted acceptances. A carried out his contract with C (whose acceptance had been posted first), and B sued A for damages. The trial judge held that as the subject matter had been sold to C, there was no contract with B. On appeal the Full Court of the Supreme Court of Victoria held that this conclusion was clearly
incorrect as B had no knowledge of this sale when he accepted. The result is that in such a case the seller can only carry out the contract with one acceptor, but will be liable in damages to the others. The offeror in such a situation should make it clear that the offer is being made to more than one person and that it can only be accepted by the first person to notify acceptance. [3-46] Revocation of offers to public. We have seen that an offer may be made to the public at large or to an indeterminate number of persons.239 In such a case the offeror does not know the identity of the persons who have become aware of the offer and who may be contemplating accepting. The question of how such an offer may be revoked does not appear to have arisen before an Australian or English court, but was considered by the Supreme Court of the United States in the frequently cited case of Shuey v United States.240 It was held that where an offer of a reward was made by publication of a public notice, that offer could be withdrawn by a similar notice. As this had been done well before the plaintiff purported to accept, he was not entitled to the reward even though he was in fact ignorant of the revocation. It is likely that this approach would be followed by Australian courts in cases where no feasible substitute approach was available, as actual communication of revocation would be practically impossible. Publication of such a notice of revocation may not be effective immediately, as there must presumably be ‘publicity equivalent to that given the offer, [page 82] including in appropriate cases a reasonable time for equivalent indirect circulation’.241 Such an offer would, irrespective of attempts made to revoke it, in any event ultimately lapse by expiry of time.242 [3-47] Revocation and option contracts. The basic rule is that an offer may be withdrawn at any time prior to acceptance. Option contracts are an exception to this rule. Option contracts usually relate to a contemplated sale of property and under such a contract the person to have the benefit of the option (the ‘optionee’) gives consideration for the promise of the other party (the ‘optionor’) to sell provided that the optionee exercises the right within the option’s validity period. Upon exercise of the option both parties are bound by a contract of sale, but until that time only the optionor is bound; the optionee is free to decide whether or not to proceed with the proposed transaction. The consideration provided by the optionee for the option is the price paid for the optionor forgoing the right to sell
elsewhere (or to decide not to sell at all) during the option period. The option contract may provide that if the option is exercised the amount paid as consideration for the option will be credited towards the purchase price of the property sold, but this depends on the terms of the contract. Particularly where the period during which the option may be exercised is long the consideration paid for the option may be a lot of money, but an option contract may provide for a purely nominal consideration (such as $1). As is shown later,243 a purely nominal consideration is nonetheless sufficient consideration to support a contract and this principle applies to options as to any other kind of contract.244 It appears that an option granted by deed has the same effect even though no consideration is given for the grant of the option.245 In some situations an offeror who has promised to keep an offer open may not be able to revoke with impunity even though there is no consideration for an option contract, because of the operation of promissory estoppel.246 Where the option will result in a contract of purchase (usually one for the acquisition of an interest in land) which will be specifically enforceable, then the option contract is itself specifically enforceable. One result of this is that the optionee acquires a proprietary interest in the property which is the subject matter of the transaction and can prevent the optionor dealing with the property inconsistently with the option.247 The nature and consequences of the remedy of specific performance are discussed in Chapter 39. [page 83] [3-48] Juristic nature of options. There is a ‘standing controversy’248 about the juristic nature of an option contract. The view which commands most support in the Australian cases is that an option is an irrevocable offer; that is, an offer coupled with a contract that the offer will not be revoked during the period of time specified in the option.249 There is also, however, considerable support for the view that an option is a conditional contract; that is, a contract to sell upon the condition that the optionee within the stipulated time will bind him- or herself by complying with the conditions expressed for the exercise of the option.250 On this view, when the option is exercised, what was originally a conditional contract becomes fully binding on both parties. In comparison, on the irrevocable offer approach the exercise of the option is an acceptance giving rise to a new contract. Where an option is worded in such a way as to suggest
that it is either an irrevocable offer or a conditional contract, the form of words used in the contract is controlling.251 In most cases it makes no difference which view is correct as to the nature of an option,252 though difficulties may arise in some situations; for example, where an option is expressed to be exercisable by the optionee or a nominee of the optionee and where it is argued that the benefit of an option has been assigned. The nature of these difficulties and other questions relating to the exercise of options are beyond the scope of this work.253 [3-49] Unilateral contracts. We discussed earlier situations where an offer is a promise given in return for the performing of an act rather than in return for a counter-promise.254 A typical example of such a case is the offer of a reward for the giving of certain information relating to the commission of a crime or the offer of a reward for the return of lost property. In such cases, the performing of the act called for is the acceptance of the offer, and it is said that the offeror has impliedly dispensed with the need for notice of acceptance. In such a case the person accepting is never bound by any executory obligation as no performance has been promised to the offeror. Such contracts are usually referred to as ‘unilateral’ contracts, in contrast to ‘bilateral’ contracts where a promise is given in return for a promise.255 Where an offer is made which contemplates a unilateral contract, the performance of the requested act is both the acceptance and the consideration by the offeree. In some cases the act contemplated will involve a performance spread over a period of time. Examples of such acts [page 84] include ‘if you walk to York, I will give you £100’256 and an offer of £100 to any person who should swim 100 yards in the harbour on the first day of the year.257 In such a case the terms of the offer indicate that the offeror does not expect that a person wanting the reward will promise to perform the requested act. A person who starts to perform indicates a hope to qualify for the reward, but is not promising to complete performance and, if the person gives up halfway through, would not be in breach of contract. Of course, that person would not be entitled to the reward because they have not completed the conditions on which the reward is payable; nor could part of the reward be claimed, because nothing was promised to the part-performer. Just because an intention to accept is indicated by starting performance it does
not necessarily mean that a unilateral contract is involved. The correct interpretation of the offer may well be that no express acceptance is required, but that when the offeree starts performance the offeree can be taken to have impliedly promised to complete the performance; that is, a bilateral contract has been made, where the acceptance is a counter-promise implied from conduct.258 If, for example, A says that she shall pay a house painter, B, $1000 to paint her house while she is away on holidays, a bilateral contract is clearly formed if B promises to do so. But if B says that he is not certain whether current jobs will be finished in time to allow this, A may reply that, although she realises that there is no promise to do the work, she will pay $1000 to B if the work is done. If B did start painting, this would probably amount to an implied promise to complete the work,259 and so B could not leave A with a partially painted house. The correct inference will be determined by examining what the parties said, and it appears that in cases of doubt the courts are likely to lean towards inferring that a bilateral rather than a unilateral contract was contemplated.260 [3-50] Revocation and unilateral contracts. Can an offer of a unilateral contract be revoked after an offeree has commenced performance but before it has been completed? While this question has been debated261 there is little authority, no doubt because the point will rarely cause difficulty in practice. It is difficult to see how a unilateral contract may be said to have been performed prior to complete performance by the offeree, [page 85] because while it has only been partially performed the offeree may withdraw. If we say that the offeree has not accepted until the performance is complete, can the offeror revoke the offer on the principle that an offer may be revoked at any time prior to acceptance? Often the offeree will have spent considerable time and energy, and perhaps money, in a partial performance and it might be unjust if the offeree was deprived of the opportunity to complete performance and to earn the benefit promised by the offeror. An American writer once suggested that an offer of a unilateral contract should be read as containing an implied subsidiary promise that the offer will not be revoked once performance has commenced.262 This approach seems supported by the early New South Wales case of Abbott v Lance,263 although the agreement and the reasoning of the court are not particularly clear. The relevant
facts of Abbott v Lance are that Lance had offered to sell stations to Abbott on terms, but Abbott was not willing to accept until he had inspected the stations, which were about 500 miles away. It was agreed that Abbott would have two months to inspect and that if within that time Abbott offered to purchase on Lance’s terms, Lance would sell on those terms. There was a promise that Lance was in the meantime free to sell to anyone else, but that if Abbott made within the two months a bona fide offer to buy Lance would, if he had already sold, pay £100 to Abbott. Abbott started to ride to inspect the stations, but when about halfway was overtaken by a letter from Lance advising that the stations had been sold. Could Abbott recover £100 from Lance? Lance argued that no contract was formed since he could withdraw his offer at any time and Abbott was not bound to purchase. (He was presumably not bound to inspect the property.) The court appears to have regarded the arrangement as involving a unilateral offer to keep the offer of sale open (or alternatively to pay £100) if Abbott should inspect the properties and make a bona fide offer to buy. The court thought the principle that an offer may be retracted before acceptance was not applicable, since the part performance of the journey by Abbott was sufficient consideration to prevent revocation of the unilateral offer. The promise not to revoke the unilateral offer in Abbott v Lance was an express offer, but there would seem little difficulty in implying such an offer in an appropriate case. Part performance of the act called for could then be regarded as sufficient consideration for the promise not to revoke.264 If this analysis is accepted by the courts, it would, of course, not be possible to imply a promise not to revoke if the offeror expressly reserved the power to revoke at any time, or if the facts gave rise to an inference that the offeree took the risk of revocation even after he or she had commenced [page 86] performance.265 Moreover, revocation would apparently still be effective if the offeree had not commenced to perform but had merely made preparations to perform.266 In the Full Federal Court decision of Mobil Oil Australia Ltd v Lyndel Nominees Pty Ltd267 some service station franchisees claimed that Mobil had promised them some years of free tenure if they could achieve certain sales records for a number of years. The franchisees argued that as they had
commenced performance, Mobil could not implement its purported revocation of those alleged offers. The Full Federal Court disagreed. The court considered all the authorities and arguments concerning whether unilateral offers should be able to be revoked once the act of acceptance has commenced. Their Honours did not think that it would be universally unjust for an offeror to revoke an offer, even if acceptance had commenced.268 Furthermore, to the extent that earlier authorities made such a suggestion, the court disagreed.269 However, they stated that: ‘In the circumstances of a particular case, it may be appropriate to find that the offeror has entered into an implied ancillary contract not to revoke, or that the offeror is estopped from falsifying an assumption, engendered by it, that the offeree will not be deprived of the chance of completing the act of acceptance’.270 On the facts before them, their Honours did not think it was unjust of Mobil to revoke the offer. The franchisees would benefit if they in fact performed the act of acceptance, since their businesses would be successful. Furthermore, the court did not think, even if there was a contract not to revoke, that the revocation would have been ineffective. In the absence of any specific relief, such as an injunction, the revocation would be effective though the offeror would be liable in damages.
Rejection [3-51] Offer terminated by rejection. An offer is terminated once rejected by the offeree.271 The offeror can assume that the offer is no longer open to acceptance and that there is no need to revoke it. A counter-offer is treated as impliedly rejecting an offer.272 It follows that any subsequent attempt by the offeree to accept can at most be a counter-offer which the original offeror is free to accept or reject. Of course, an offeree will often reject an offer by making a counter-offer on terms more favourable to the offeree in the hope that the original offeror will accept them. The original [page 87] offeror may reject the counter-offer, but in terms which indicate that the original offer is still open. In such a case the offeror has renewed the original offer and the offeree may accept, but only because following the rejection the offeror chose to repeat the offer.273
[3-52] What amounts to rejection. Sometimes it is difficult to tell whether or not an offeree has rejected an offer. In Stevenson Jaques & Co v McLean274 an offer was made for the sale of goods at a cash price. The buyer telegraphed asking whether the seller would consider credit terms. The seller treated this as a rejection and sold the goods elsewhere, but before the buyer had received the seller’s telegram advising of this fact, the buyer had sent a telegram accepting the offer. It was held that there was a contract. The buyer’s original telegram could not be read as a counter-offer or rejection of the offer, but rather as the making of an inquiry for information to assist the decision whether to accept. Similarly, where an offeree did not expressly reject an offer but advised the offeror that he wished to take time to consult with his partners before coming to a decision, it was held that the offer had not been rejected and was still open for acceptance.275 The implied intention of the person making the counter-offer is the basis of the rule that a counter-offer operates as a rejection of an offer. So the rule would not apply if a person made a counter-offer while at the same time making it clear that the original offer had not been definitely rejected. Thus if an offeree replied to the offeror that the offer was still being considered but she would buy the property immediately if the price was reduced by $500, the offeree probably should still be able to accept the original offer.276 [3-53] Time when rejection effective. A rejection would operate to terminate an offer only when received by the offeror. There appears to be no authority about the situation where an offer is rejected by letter and then a letter purportedly accepting is subsequently posted. If the letter of acceptance arrived before the letter of rejection, there would presumably be a contract. But if the letter of rejection arrived first, the offeror should be entitled to rely upon that, with the result that the acceptance would at most be a counter-offer, even though the postal acceptance rule might otherwise apply and even though the acceptance was posted prior to the offeror’s receipt of the rejection.277 [page 88]
Lapse of Time [3-54] Offer open for stated period. An offer will sometimes lapse because time has passed, even though the offeror has not revoked the offer. We have seen
that an offer, even though stated to be open for a certain period of time, may be revoked before it has been accepted. But the stipulation of the time period, while not preventing earlier revocation by the offeror, does have the effect that the offer automatically lapses on the expiry of that period, with the result that a later acceptance is ineffective.278 An interesting application of this rule appeared in White Cliffs Opal Mines Ltd v Miller279 where negotiations were carried out between a representative of the New South Wales government and the Australian representative of a London company. An offer was made to the company and was stated to be open until 30 June. On 30 June, London time, the company sent a cable of acceptance, but it was by then 1 July in New South Wales. It was held that the meaning of the words ‘30th June’ was in the circumstances to be governed by New South Wales law and that the acceptance was too late. [3-55] Offer of indefinite duration. Where no time for acceptance is prescribed in the offer, the offer must be accepted within a ‘reasonable time’.280 What is a reasonable time will depend upon the circumstances. Where an offer is made after lengthy negotiations a longer than usual time may be allowed.281 An enforceable option will normally specify the period during which it may be exercised. However, if none is stated, an option to purchase property with a fluctuating value must be exercised promptly,282 and the fact that under an option only one party is bound would seem to indicate that a shorter period may be reasonable than if there were no option.283 Where an offer is made by fax or telex it will normally be inferred that a prompt reply is expected, so that an acceptance by letter would be too late.284 The theoretical basis of the rule that where no time for acceptance is stated acceptance must occur within a reasonable time is still not settled. The rule is generally assumed to be based upon an implied term in the offer,285 but it has more recently been held that a better explanation is that if the offeree does not accept within a reasonable time he or she must be treated as having rejected it.286 This approach would allow courts to [page 89] consider the facts as they existed at the time when the offer was made, and also facts occurring later. In a case where it was held that acceptance had been made within a reasonable time the court had regard to the fact that the offeror had received and acquiesced in notice of acceptance without making any suggestion
that it was out of time.287 Perhaps this must be regarded as a case where the offeror’s actions could be regarded as providing relevant evidence as to what the parties considered a reasonable time to be in the circumstances. Where an acceptance is made too late, it will usually be possible to regard the purported acceptance as a counter-offer which the original offeror may choose to accept (and which may well be accepted by conduct rather than expressly, especially if the offeror does not raise any objection to the acceptance being late).
Offers Subject to Condition [3-56] Conditional offers. An offer may be made subject to an express or implied condition that the offer is to be open only for so long as a certain state of affairs continues to exist.288 If that state of affairs ceases to exist, the offer automatically lapses. Thus, where a person makes an offer for the purchase of goods, it will often be proper to infer that the offer was made conditionally on the goods remaining in substantially the same condition until the time of acceptance. If the goods are, after the making of the offer, extensively damaged, a purported acceptance will not bind the offeror.289
Death of Offeror or Offeree [3-57] The effect of death on an offer. There is little authority on the effect on an offer of the offeror’s death. Although it is sometimes stated without qualification than an offer may not be accepted after the offeror’s death,290 it seems that acceptance will be effective if the offeree accepts before receiving notice of the death of the offeror.291 The latter solution would certainly be the more equitable of the two.292 [page 90] It also seems that an offer is generally not capable of acceptance by the executor or personal representatives of a deceased offeree, on the basis that the offer is intended to be made to a living person.293 However, where an option has been granted for consideration (for example, an option to purchase land or a
business) we are not concerned with a mere offer. Where the proposed purchase contract could be specifically enforced,294 the granting of the option creates a right of a proprietary nature which can normally be bought and sold like other proprietary rights. If the beneficiary of the option should die, the option can be exercised by the beneficiary’s personal representatives unless the circumstances show that the option was intended to be purely personal.295 Indeed, where there is no option, if the language of an offer shows that it was contemplated that the offer was to stand on foot for some period of time and that it might be accepted by the personal representatives if the offeree should die before acceptance, there would be no reason the personal representatives could not accept as there would simply be one form of an offer made to persons who were unascertained at the date when the offer was made.296 1.
See Chapter 6.
2.
For examples of situations in which certain of the legal consequences of a contract are established by law irrespective of what the parties (or, more likely, one of them) may have intended, see the discussion in Chapter 14 of legislation affecting exclusion clauses in consumer transactions.
3.
See [3-06].
4.
See Chapter 6.
5.
See Chapter 8.
6.
See Chapter 9.
7.
s J Stoljar, ‘Offer, Promise and Agreement’ (1955) 50 Northwestern ULR 445 at 453–6; A W B Simpson, ‘Innovation in Nineteenth Century Contract Law’ (1975) 91 LQR 247.
8.
Salmond and Williams, Principles of the Law of Contracts, 1945, p 70.
9.
See, eg Outer Suburban Property Ltd v Clarke [1933] SASR 221 (intending purchaser signing document which was later signed on behalf of vendor).
10.
Such an analysis is perhaps more realistic where the exchange takes place by mail: see, eg Eccles v Bryant [1948] 1 Ch 93; Rice v Taylor (1969) 89 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 596.
11.
[1897] AC 59.
12.
See Subdivisions Ltd v Payne [1934] SASR 214 at 220 per Napier J: ‘I think it takes some ingenuity, at times, to reconcile the practice of the common law with the theory of offer and acceptance as elements of contract’. See also Brambles Holdings Ltd v Bathurst City Council (2001) 53 NSWLR 153 per Heydon JA; Damevski v Giudice (2003) 202 ALR 494 at 508–10; Edwards v Australian Securities and Investments Commission (2009) 264 ALR 723 at 737; [2009] NSWCA 424 at [73].
13.
Thus it has been said in the United States that ‘a manifestation of mutual assent may be made even though neither offer nor acceptance can be identified and even though the moment of formation cannot be determined’ (Restatement (2d) Contracts, §22(2)).
14.
‘It would be ludicrous to suppose that business men couch their communications in the form of a catechism or reduce their negotiations to such a species of interrogatory as was formulated in the Roman Stipulatio’: Cheshire and Fifoot, Law of Contract, 3rd ed, 1952, p 28.
15.
For examples, see Integrated Lighting & Ceilings Pty Ltd v Phillips Electrical Pty Ltd (1969) 90 WN (Pt l) (NSW) 693. See also Brinkibon Ltd v Stahag Stahl GmbH [1983] 2 AC 34 at 40.
16.
The problems which arise where each party attempts to contract on the basis of their own printed terms arise not so much from an arbitrary labelling of one party as ‘offeror’ and the other as ‘offeree’ but from the insistence that offer and acceptance must exactly correspond: see [3-22].
17.
See [3-36].
18.
See, eg Haynes v McNeil (1906) 8 WALR 186; Glass v Pioneer Rubber Works of Australia Ltd [1906] VLR 754.
19.
See W A Dewhurst & Co Pty Ltd v Cawrse [1960] VR 278 at 282.
20.
(1905) 5 SR (NSW) 146. For further examples see Malthouse v Adelaide Milk Supply Co-operative Ltd [1922] SASR 572; Empirnall Holdings Pty Ltd v Machon Paull Partners Pty Ltd (1988) 14 NSWLR 523; Integrated Computer Services Pty Ltd v Digital Equipment Corp (Aust) Pty Ltd (1988) 5 BPR 97,326.
21.
Discussed [3-49]–[3-50].
22.
See [1-10], [10-06], [12-03], [18-24], [20-13].
23.
John Howard & Co (Northern) Ltd v J P Knight Ltd [1969] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 364.
24.
Rymark Australia Development Consultants Pty Ltd v Draper [1977] Qd R 336.
25.
See [3-44].
26.
See the discussion in Air Great Lakes Pty Ltd v K s Easter (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 309. For a useful comparison of common law and civil law approaches see F Kessler and E Fine, ‘Culpa in Contrahendo’ (1964) 77 Harv LR 401.
27.
The American Restatement (2d) Contracts, §24 puts it thus: ‘An offer is the manifestation of willingness to enter into a bargain, so made as to justify another person in understanding that his assent to that bargain is invited and will conclude it’.
28.
Corbin on Contracts, Vol 1, 1963, p 24.
29.
(1954) 93 CLR 546.
30.
Milne v A-G (Tas) (1956) 95 CLR 460. See also Re Sander (1934) 7 ABC 129 (statement by father that he hoped to be able to repay his son’s debt not a promise to pay); Walk v Matthews (1914) 18 CLR 440 (promise by father to leave child a share of his estate a representation of intention, not a contractual promise).
31.
Spencer v Harding (1870) LR 5 CP 561; Clifton v Palumbo [1944] 2 All ER 497.
32.
Patterson v Dolman [1908] VLR 354; Bigg v Boyd Gibbins Ltd [1971] 2 All ER 183.
33.
Dickinson v Dodds (1876) 2 Ch D 463.
34.
Wells v Birtchnell (1893) 19 VLR 473 (document stating ‘I agree to purchase’ merely an offer as no previous offer made). A purported but ineffective acceptance will very often have effect as a counteroffer: see [3-19].
35.
MacRobertson Miller Airline Services v Commissioner of State Taxation (WA) (1975) 133 CLR 125 at 136; 8 ALR 131 (a case in which it was said that the issue of an airline ticket to an intending passenger amounts to an offer which is accepted by the passenger orally or (more usually) by conduct in retaining the ticket without objecting to any of the conditions contained on it). See also Hood v Anchor Line (Henderson Bros) Ltd [1918] AC 837 at 846; Wilkie v London Passenger Transport Board [1947] 1 All ER 258 at 259; New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v A M Satterthwaite & Co Ltd [1975] AC 154 at 167.
36.
(1870) LR 5 CP 561. See also Grainger v Gough [1896] AC 325 at 333–4.
37.
Partridge v Crittenden [1968] 2 All ER 421.
38.
Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain v Boots Cash Chemists (Southern) Ltd [1953] 1 QB 401; Fisher v Bell [1961] 1 QB 394.
39.
See, eg Grainger v Gough [1896] AC 325 at 333–4; Esso Petroleum Ltd v Commissioners of Customs & Excise [1976] 1 All ER 117 at 126.
40.
As to the latter point see Esso Petroleum Ltd v Commissioners of Customs & Excise [1976] 1 All ER 117 at 124, 126 (per Lord Russell). In that case at least two of the Law Lords (Lords Simon and Wilberforce) regarded the display by petrol station proprietors of posters promising a ‘gift’ for every four gallons of petrol purchased as an offer.
41.
For American examples see Restatement (2d) Contracts, §26; Lefkowitz v Great Minneapolis Surplus Store 86 NW 2d 689 (1957).
42.
[1893] 1 QB 256. For a very interesting discussion of the background to this famous case see A W B Simpson, ‘Quackery and Contract Law: The Case of the Carbolic Smoke Ball’ (1985) 14 J Leg Studies 345.
43.
See [3-49].
44.
See, eg Williams v Carwardine (1833) 5 Car & P 566; 172 ER 1101; R v Clarke (1927) 40 CLR 227. Query the application of the reward cases in Denton v Great Northern Railway Co (1856) J E & B 860; 119 ER 701 where a majority held that the publication of a railway time-table amounted to an offer accepted by any intending passenger who tendered the price of a ticket.
45.
See Thornton v Shoe Lane Parking Ltd [1971] 2 QB 163 at 169 per Lord Denning MR.
46.
(1907) 5 CLR 68.
47.
(1907) 5 CLR 68 at 76. See also Kelly v Caledonian Coal Co (1898) 19 LR (NSW) 1 (statement of price at which coal would be supplied over an 18-month period held not to amount to a promise to supply in the absence of any reference to quantity to be delivered); Re Webster (1975) 132 CLR 270.
48.
As to implied terms see generally Chapter 11.
49.
Contracts for the sale of land (including options) must generally be evidenced in writing to be enforceable: see Chapter 9.
50.
Pattison v Mann (1975) 13 SASR 34 at 37 per Bray CJ.
51.
[1893] AC 552. See also Clifton v Palumbo [1944] 2 All ER 497; Coogee Esplanade Surf Motel Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth (1976) 50 ALR 363. Compare Bigg v Boyd Gibbins Ltd [1971] 2 All ER 183, where Harvey v Facey and Clifton v Palumbo were distinguished on the facts of the case.
52.
[1963] ALR 346.
53.
As to online auctions, see Smythe v Thomas (2007) 71 NSWLR 537; [2007] NSWSC 844.
54.
Payne v Cave (1789) 3 TR 148; 100 ER 502.
55.
ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 60; NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 60; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 60; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 59; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 57; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 62; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 64; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 57. On sales by auction generally see Sutton, Sales and Consumer Law in Australia and New Zealand, 4th ed, 1995, paras 23.1–23.14.
56.
(1873) LR 8 QB 286.
57.
Where the seller does not expressly reserve a right to bid, it is unlawful for the seller or anyone on his or her behalf to bid, and any sale contravening this rule may be treated as fraudulent by the buyer: see the provisions of the sale of goods legislation cited in n 54. Such a right to bid serves a similar function to that of setting a reserve price in that the seller is protected against the risk of the property being sold at what he or she regards as an unacceptably low price.
58.
[2000] 1 WLR 1962 (see J W Carter (2001) 17 JCL 69).
59.
(1858) 1 El & El 299 at 309; 120 ER 920 at 925.
60.
Possibly the contract would be with the seller himself or herself rather than the auctioneer in cases where the identity of the seller is disclosed: see Mainprice v Westley (1865) 34 LJQB 229; Hordern House Pty Ltd v Arnold [1989] VR 402.
61.
See the exchange of views in (1952) 68 LQR 238, 457; (1953) 69 LQR 21.
62.
[1924] VLR 274. But cf AGC (Advances) Ltd v McWhirter (1977) 1 BPR 9454. In Ulbrick v Laidlaw the court also rejected the argument that the question of bona fides was to be finally decided by the auctioneer. It is unclear how far the auctioneer has a discretion in this regard: see Green v Rose (1900) 21 NSWLR (Eq) 226; Richards v Phillips [1968] 2 All ER 859.
63.
As to loss of chance damages see [36-19]–[36-20].
64.
(1900) 26 VLR 158.
65.
(1870) LR 5 CP 561.
66.
This view appears to have had the support of Bowen LJ in Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co [1893] 1 QB 256 at 269.
67.
[1986] 1 AC 207.
68.
Hughes Aircraft Systems International v Airservices Australia (1997) 146 ALR 1. See Bill Napier, ‘Process Contracts in Government Commercial Tendering’ (2011) 27 JCL 171. See also Blackpool & Fylde Aero Club Ltd v Blackpool Borough Council [1990] 1 WLR 1195, criticised by A Phang, ‘Tenders and Uncertainty’ (1991) 4 JCL 46.
69.
[1953] 1 QB 401.
70.
See Unger (1953) 16 MLR 369; Williams (1953) 10 NILQ 117; cf Montrose (1954) 10 NILQ 178; (1955) 4 Amer Jnl Comp L 235.
71.
This reasoning was perhaps not strictly necessary for the decision, for each of the members of the Court of Appeal agreed with the reasons of Lord Goddard CJ at first instance who stated ([1952] 2 QB 795 at 802) that even if a contract was formed when the customer selected goods from the shelves, the sale would still, on the facts, have been made under the supervision of the pharmacist.
72.
For a discussion as to whether, on a prospective purchaser entering a store, there may arise a limited contract (to the effect that any shopping trolley supplied will be reasonably fit for its purpose) see Cottee v Franklins Self-Serve Pty Ltd [1997] 1 Qd R 469.
73.
[1953] 1 QB 401.
74.
Fisher v Bell [1961] 1 QB 394.
75.
Partridge v Crittenden [1968] 2 All ER 421.
76.
British Car Auctions Ltd v Wright [1972] 1 WLR 1519.
77.
See Note (1961) 1 Adel LR 221; J C Smith, ‘Civil Law Concepts in the Criminal Law’ (1972) 31 CLJ 197.
78.
[1959] SASR 295.
79.
[1971] 2 NSWLR 162, followed in Attorney-General (NSW) v Australian Fixed Trusts Ltd [1974] 1 NSWLR 110. See also WA Pines Pty Ltd v Registrar of Companies [1976] WAR 149. Cf Reardon v Morley Ford Pty Ltd (1980) 33 ALR 417 (a decision on s 56 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth)), not followed in Wallace v Brodribb (1985) 58 ALR 737.
80.
For decisions on s 56 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), on which the section is based, see Reardon v Morley Ford Pty Ltd (1980) 33 ALR 417; Wallace v Brodribb (1985) 58 ALR 737;
Wallace v Walplan Pty Ltd (1985) 8 FCR 14 (affirmed (1985) 8 FCR 27). 81.
Harris v Nickerson (1873) LR 8 QB 286 (see [3-11]).
82.
[1893] 1 QB 256 at 268. The facts of this case were set out at [3-08].
83.
McMahon v Gilberd & Co Ltd [1955] NZLR 1206 (advertisement offering refund of ‘deposit’ on return of empty bottles directed to consumers to the exclusion of bottle dealers).
84.
[1970] 1 NSWR 526, followed in O’Halloran Enterprises Pty Ltd v Williamson [1979] VR 33; Bell Bros Pty Ltd v Sarich [1971] WAR 157.
85.
[1892] 2 Ch 27 at 37. But see P & M Constructions Pty Ltd v Elders Leasing Ltd [1992] 1 Qd R 264 at 280–1.
86.
See [3-39].
87.
Cole v Cottingham (1837) 8 Car & P 75; 173 ER 406 (expression to third party of intention to marry C, not uttered in hearing of C nor communicated to C with authority of speaker, held not to be an offer).
88.
(1912) 12 SR (NSW) 382. See also Powell v Lee (1908) 99 LT 284 (where the unauthorised communication was, for reasons which are not clear, treated as an acceptance rather than an offer; the reasoning is, however, equally applicable to an unauthorised communication of an offer); Wilson v Belfast Corp (1921) 55 ILT 205 (resolution of city council held not to be an offer, partly on ground that publication not authorised); Gjergja v Cooper [1987] VR 167 at 196–7, 206, 208–9.
89.
See [3-05].
90.
See, eg Evans Deakin Industries Ltd v Queensland Electricity Generating Board (1984) 1 BCL 334.
91.
Appleby v Johnson (1874) LR 9 CP 158; Ballas v Theophilos (No 2) (1957) 98 CLR 193.
92.
White Trucks Pty Ltd v Riley (1948) 66 WN (NSW) 101; Integrated Lighting & Ceilings Pty Ltd v Phillips Electrical Pty Ltd (1969) 90 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 693.
93.
Nicholson v Smith (1882) 22 Ch D 640; Ballas v Theophilos (No 2) (1957) 98 CLR 193 at 205; B Seppelt & Sons Ltd v Commissioner for Main Roads (1975) 1 BPR 9147 at 9149; Traywinds Pty Ltd v Cooper [1989] 1 Qd R 222.
94.
Davies v Smith (1938) 12 ALJ 258; Lewis Construction Co Pty Ltd v M Tichauer Société Anonyme [1966] VR 341. Cf Lamont v Heron (1970) 45 ALJR 102.
95.
McClay v Seeligson (1904) 7 WALR 87; Ocean Coal Co Ltd v Powell Duffryn Steam Coal Co Ltd [1932] 1 Ch 654.
96.
Morrison v Neill (1875) 1 VLR (L) 287. See also Georgoulis v Mandalinic [1984] 1 NSWLR 612.
97.
See, eg Holland v Eyre (1825) 2 Sim & St 194; 57 ER 319; Mooney v Williams (1905) 3 CLR 1; Bastard v McCallum [1924] VLR 9; Carello v Jordan [1935] QSR 294.
98.
Cullen v Bickers (1878) 12 SALR 5; Jones v Daniel [1894] 2 Ch 332.
99.
Quadling v Robinson (1976) 137 CLR 192 at 201; 10 ALR 319. See also Cavallari v Premier Refrigeration Co Pty Ltd (1952) 85 CLR 20; Ballas v Theophilos (No 2) (1957) 98 CLR 193 at 204– 6, 209–11.
100. (1927) 27 SR (NSW) 427. 101. See also Universal Guarantee Pty Ltd v Carlile [1957] VR 68; Parbury Henty & Co Pty Ltd v General Engineering & Agencies Pty Ltd (1973) 47 ALJR 336. 102. Dunlop v Higgins (1848) 1 HLC 381; 9 ER 805. See also B Seppelt & Sons Ltd v Commissioner for Main Roads (1975) 1 BPR 9147.
103. (1970) 114 Sol J 845. 104. See [28-04]. 105. (1897) 18 LR (NSW) 282. 106. However, although a plaintiff in a suit for the specific performance of a contract unenforceable unless evidenced in writing (see [9-19]) may in some cases be able to waive a term agreed on solely for the plaintiff’s benefit but not included in the writing, this principle does not apply where the question is whether there was ever an agreement reached between the parties: Bastard v McCallum [1924] VLR 9. 107. See [3-12]. 108. (1900) 21 LR (NSW) 338. 109. Great Northern Railway Co v Witham (1873) LR 9 CP 16; Kelly v Caledonian Coal Co (1898) LR (NSW) 1; Re Webster (1975) 132 CLR 270; 6 ALR 65. 110. Milne v Municipal Council of Sydney (1912) 14 CLR 54; Jarvis v Pitt Ltd (1935) 54 CLR 506. See also J Kitchen & Sons Pty Ltd v Stewart’s Cash & Carry Stores (1942) 66 CLR 116. As to the consideration for such a requirements contract, see [6-40]. 111. (1912) 14 CLR 54. 112. [1979] 1 WLR 401. See also OTM Ltd v Hydranautics [1981] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 211. 113. See Re Production Sheet Metals Pty Ltd [1971] QWN 16. 114. Bastard v McCallum [1924] VLR 9; Turner Kempson & Co Pty Ltd v Camm [1922] VLR 498. Compare Universal Guarantee Pty Ltd v Carlile [1957] VR 68. 115. See, eg Uniform Commercial Code (US), §2-207. See also United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (1980), Art 19; as to the application of this Convention in Australia see [1-20]. See also E H Hondius and Ch Mahé, ‘The Battle of the Forms: Towards a Uniform Solution’ (1998) 12 JCL 268. 116. See Bastard v McCallum [1924] VLR 9, applying Felthouse v Bindley (1862) 11 CBNS 869; 142 ER 1037 (see [3-29]). But see English and Foreign Co v Arduin (1870) LR 5 HL 64. For the view that an exception may exist where a customer is handed a ticket containing contractual exemption clauses see MacRobertson Miller Airline Services v Commissioner of State Taxation (WA) (1975) 133 CLR 125 at 137–9 per Stephen J (but contrast Jacobs J at 142–4); 8 ALR 131; see further M Powell, ‘Acceptance by Silence in the Law of Contract’ (1977) 5 ABLR 260. 117. In such cases ‘there is often a suspicion, if not a moral certainty, that the provision which one or both parties now contends should control is one of which neither party was particularly cognizant, and one which, if contested during negotiations, would have been deleted by the party in whose favour it ran’: Murray, Cases and Materials on Contracts, 1969, p 146. 118. Reynolds v Atherton (1922) 127 LT 189. 119. Ronald v Lalor (1872) 3 VR (E) 98; Lee v Sayers (1909) 28 NZLR 804; Lang v James Morrison & Co Ltd (1911) 13 CLR 1. Cf Wilson v Winton [1969] Qd R 536 (acceptance effective where offeree acting as agent for undisclosed principals and thus was personally bound). 120. Carter v Hyde (1923) 33 CLR 115. 121. Varley v Fotheringham [1905] SALR 19. 122. Re National Savings Bank Association (Hebb’s Case) (1867) LR 4 Eq 9; Re F H Ring & Co Ltd [1924] SASR 138. 123. Re Gambrinus Lager Beer Brewery Co Ltd (1886) 12 VLR 446; Re F H Ring & Co Ltd [1924] SASR 138; Re Clifton Springs Hotel Ltd [1939] VLR 27. But see Farmers’ Mercantile Union & Chaff Mills
Ltd v Coade (1921) 30 CLR 113. 124. Batt v Onslow (1892) 13 LR (NSW) Eq 79. 125. Powell v Lee (1908) 99 LT (NS) 284 (unauthorised communication of decision of governing body of school not an acceptance). See also Banks v Williams (1912) 12 SR (NSW) 382; Wilson v Belfast Corp (1921) 55 ILT 205. 126. Latec Finance Pty Ltd v Knight [1969] 2 NSWR 79 at 81; Associated Midland Corp Ltd v Bank of NSW (1984) 51 ALR 641. 127. See [3-30]–[3-38]. 128. [1893] 1 QB 256. See [3-08]. 129. Consequently communication of acceptance is usually not required by an offer of a unilateral contract. It should, however, be remembered that the performance of an act as acceptance does not necessarily indicate that the contract is unilateral: see [3-49]. 130. Brogden v Metropolitan Railway Co (1877) 2 App Cas 666 at 691; Menzies v Williams (1893) 10 WN (NSW) 13; Mayers & Co v Johnson & Co [1905] QWN 39. 131. Latec Finance Pty Ltd v Knight [1969] 2 NSWR 79. 132. Corbin on Contracts, Vol 1, 1963, p 88. 133. Quenerduaine v Cole (1883) 32 WR 185. 134. Tinn v Hoffman & Co (1873) 29 LT 271; White Trucks Pty Ltd v Riley (1948) 66 WN (NSW) 101; Manchester Diocesan Council v Commercial & General Investments Ltd [1970] 1 WLR 241; George Hudson Holdings Ltd v Rudder (1973) 128 CLR 387. 135. Tinn v Hoffman & Co (1873) 29 LT 271. 136. Bowman v Durham Holdings Pty Ltd (1973) 131 CLR 8; 2 ALR 193. But contrast Manchester Diocesan Council v Commercial & General Investments Ltd [1970] 1 WLR 241 at 246. 137. (1862) 11 CBNS 869; 142 ER 1037. See also Empirnall Holdings Pty Ltd v Machon Paull Partners Pty Ltd (1988) 14 NSWLR 523. See generally C J Miller, ‘Felthouse v Bindley Re-Visited’ (1972) 35 MLR 489. See also [1-11]. 138. (1862) 11 CBNS 869 at 875; 142 ER 1037 at 1040. 139. (1878) 4 VLR (E) 161. See also Empirnall Holdings Pty Ltd v Machon Paull Partners Pty Ltd (1988) 14 NSWLR 523; Re Selectmove Ltd [1995] 1 WLR 474. 140. Some support for this view may be obtained from Weatherby v Banham (1832) 5 C & P 228; 172 ER 950. See also Restatement (2d) Contracts, §69; Schlesinger, ed, Formation of Contracts, 1968, Vol II, pp 1096–1108. 141. See Allied Marine Transport Ltd v Vale do Rio Doce Navegacao SA [1985] 2 All ER 796; but see Vitol SA v Norelf Ltd (The Santa Clara) [1996] 3 All ER 193. 142. See Empirnall Holdings Pty Ltd v Machon Paull Partners Pty Ltd (1988) 14 NSWLR 523; Airways Corporation of New Zealand v Geyserland Airways Ltd [1996] 1 NZLR 116. 143. The action was brought by the uncle against the auctioneer, the uncle arguing that a contract had been formed by virtue of which property in the horse had passed to him and that the auctioneer’s oversight in selling the horse to a third party constituted the tort of conversion. Keating J, while agreeing with the decision, considered that the result might have been different if the question had arisen as between the uncle and the nephew. 144. Cheshire, Fifoot and Furmston’s Law of Contract, 14th ed, 2001, pp 52–4. On the need for a ‘definite overt act’ where communication of acceptance has been dispensed with see White Trucks Pty Ltd v
Riley (1948) 66 WN (NSW) 101. 145. See, eg Anson’s Law of Contract, 28th ed, 2002, p 48. 146. See Restatement (2d) Contracts, §69. 147. But see Fairline Shipping Corp v Adamson [1985] QB 180 at 188–9 where Kerr J considered that the suggested rule cannot fit into the accepted law of offer and acceptance. See also Food Corp of India v Antclizo Shipping Corp (The Antclizo) [1987] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 130 at 146 affirmed on other grounds [1988] 1 WLR 603. 148. See Australian Consumer Law, s 40, which also deals with unordered services and directory entries. 149. [1892] 2 Ch 27 at 33, see also at 36 per Kay LJ; Tallerman & Co Pty Ltd v Nathan’s Merchandise (Vic) Pty Ltd (1957) 98 CLR 93 at 111–12; Holwell Securities Ltd v Hughes [1974] 1 All ER 161; Bressan v Squires [1974] 2 NSWLR 460. 150. See [3-44]. 151. However, as there was in this case no consideration for an option, the offer could nonetheless be withdrawn at any earlier time provided that this was done before it had been effectively accepted: see [3-47]. 152. Cowan v O’Connor (1888) 20 QBD 640; Lewis Construction Co Pty Ltd v M Tichauer Société Anonyme [1966] VR 341. See also Brinkibon Ltd v Stahag Stahl GmbH [1983] 2 AC 34. As to a telegram sent through the post office to a telex receiver see Express Airways v Port Augusta Air Services [1980] Qd R 543. 153. Bressan v Squires [1974] 2 NSWLR 460 at 461–2. But cf Holwell Securities Ltd v Hughes [1974] 1 All ER 161 at 166–7. 154. See [3-28]. 155. Holwell Securities Ltd v Hughes [1974] 1 All ER 161; Bressan v Squires [1974] 2 NSWLR 460. Both cases involved the exercise of an option; in such a case the offeror is bound during the period of the option while the offeree is not (see [3-47]), and this fact may have made the courts more disposed than might otherwise have been the case to hold that the language used was sufficient to oust the postal acceptance rule. See also Nunin Holdings Pty Ltd v Tullamarine Estates Pty Ltd [1994] 1 VR 74. 156. A desire to avoid the necessity for such fine distinctions was one reason for the vigorous dissent by Bramwell LJ in Household Fire and Carriage Accident Insurance Co (Ltd) v Grant (1879) LR 4 Ex D 216, but his prediction that the effect of the rule established by the majority would be that it would be obviated by offerors using words indicating the necessity for actual communication has not been borne out in practice: see his remarks at 236, 238–9. 157. Bruner v Moore [1904] 1 Ch 305; Lewes Nominees Pty Ltd v Strang (1983) 57 ALJR 823. 158. Perhaps the correct inference is that the acceptance must be posted within such a time that it would normally be received before the expiry of the time limit: D M Evans, ‘The Anglo-American Mailing Rule’ (1966) 15 ICLQ 553 at 569, 574. The offeror may, of course, expressly stipulate this result (see [3-34]) but it is suggested that it is rather artificial to read such an inference into the mere fixing of a time limit without further elaboration. 159. Holwell Securities Ltd v Hughes [1974] 1 All ER 161 at 166–7. 160. (1957) 98 CLR 93 at 111–12. 161. In Holwell Securities Ltd v Hughes [1974] 1 All ER 161 at 167 Lawton LJ considered that the special nature of an option contract was such as to render the rule inapplicable. The other members of the court did not approach the question on this basis, and the point was referred to but left open by Bowen CJ in Eq in Bressan v Squires [1974] 2 NSWLR 460.
162. Bressan v Squires [1974] 2 NSWLR 460 at 462. 163. See [3-38]. 164. An argument against this view would be that at least where the courier is employed by the offeree he retains the right to withdraw the letter until it is actually delivered. Loss of control is one argument cited to support the postal acceptance rule, but it is probably not a determining basis of the rule: see [3-35]. 165. Re London and Northern Bank: Ex parte Jones [1900] 1 Ch 220. The question was whether the offer had been accepted prior to the communication of a revocation of the offer; the offeree was unable to prove that the acceptance had been properly posted by the postman before this time. 166. Cf Re London and Northern Bank: Ex parte Jones [1900] 1 Ch 220. See also Adams v Lindsell (1818) 1 B & Ald 681; 106 ER 250 (delay caused by misdirection of an offer ignored in determining whether acceptance posted in time; but query whether this should be so where offeree should have realised that offer had been delayed). 167. Bal v Van Standen [1902] TS 128. 168. (1879) LR 4 Ex D 216. See also Georgoulis v Mandalinic [1984] 1 NSWLR 612. 169. See Holwell Securities Ltd v Hughes [1974] 1 All ER 161 at 164. See also Brinkibon Ltd v Stahag Stahl GmbH [1983] 2 AC 34 at 43 per Lord Fraser. Restatement (2d) Contracts, §568 goes further and holds that any written acceptance will be effective when it comes into the possession of the person addressed or when it has been deposited in some place which has been authorised by that person as the place for communications to be deposited. 170. (1973) 131 CLR 8. See also Lewes Nominees Pty Ltd v Strang (1983) 57 ALJR 823; compare WX Investments Ltd v Begg (Fraser, Part 20 Defendant) [2002] 1 WLR 2849. 171. See eg s Gardner, ‘Trashing with Trollope: a Deconstruction of the Postal Rules in Contract’ (1992) 12 Oxford J Legal Studies 170. 172. See, eg Household Fire and Carriage Accident Insurance Co (Ltd) v Grant (1879) LR 4 x D 216 at 221; Byrne v Van Tienhoven (1880) 5 CPD 344. 173. [1892] 2 Ch 27 at 35–6. For a further discussion of this distinction see Batt v Onslow (1892) 13 LR (NSW) Eq 79. 174. See, eg Dunlop v Higgins (1848) 1 HLC 381; 9 ER 805; Household Fire and Carriage Accident Insurance Co (Ltd) v Grant (1879) LR 4 Ex D 216 at 223. 175. Entores Ltd v Miles Far East Corp [1955] 2 QB 327. Some American courts, relying on a regulation of the US Post Office entitling a person depositing a letter in the mail to reclaim it, have held that as the sender of a letter no longer loses the right of control the postal acceptance rule is no longer applicable in that country. For an argument against this idea see C L Pannam, ‘Postal Regulation 289 and Acceptance of an Offer by Post’ (1960) 2 MULR 388 (where the US cases are discussed). The Australian Postal Corporation General Postal Services Terms and Conditions (made under the Australian Postal Corporation Act 1989 (Cth), s 32) provide for the return of articles before delivery: cl 48. However, there is no absolute right in the sender to the return of articles because certain conditions must be fulfilled, eg an authorised person must determine that there are special reasons for the withdrawal or return of the article or that the addressee has consented to its return. 176. Corbin on Contracts, Vol 1, 1963, p 337. See also Bressan v Squires [1974] 2 NSWLR 460 at 461; Brinkibon v Stahag Stahl GmbH [1983] AC 34. 177. See Schlesinger, ed, Formation of Contracts, 1968, especially Vol 1, pp 162–3, for the conclusion, based upon a comparative study, that in general in legal systems which make acceptance effective on posting, offers are normally revocable, whereas in those systems where posted acceptance is effective only on receipt, the offer will normally be irrevocable for a period of time.
178. See [3-47], [3-54]. 179. See [3-44]. 180. Re Imperial Land Co of Marseilles; Harris’ Case (1872) 7 Ch App 587 at 594–5. See also Henthorn v Fraser [1892] 2 Ch 27 at 36–7; Brinkibon Ltd v Stahag Stahl GmbH [1983] 2 AC 34 at 41. 181. See generally Nygh and Davies, Conflict of Laws in Australia, 7th ed, 2002, Chapter 19. 182. Cowan v O’Connor (1888) 20 QBD 640; Entores Ltd v Miles Far East Corp [1955] 2 QB 327; Tallerman & Co Pty Ltd v Nathan’s Merchandise (Vic) Pty Ltd (1957) 98 CLR 93; Lewis Construction Co Pty Ltd v M Tichauer Société Anonyme [1966] VR 341. 183. Tooth v Fleming (1859) Legge 1152. 184. See Schlesinger, ed, Formation of Contracts, 1968, Vol 11, pp 1393ff. See also Brinkibon Ltd v Stahag Stahl GmbH [1983] 2 AC 34 at 40. 185. A useful discussion, which reviews the conflicting opinions of the text writers, is A H Hudson, ‘Retractation of Letters of Acceptance’ (1966) 82 LQR 169. 186. Dunmore v Alexander (1830) 9 Sh (Ct of Sess) 190. It is not clear that the case involved the postal acceptance rule at all. 187. Wenkheim v Arndt (1873) 1 JR 73. The case is very briefly reported and at least a contributory factor to the decision was a strong doubt as to whether the retraction was sent by a person authorised to act on the acceptor’s behalf. 188. C L Pannam, ‘Postal Regulation 289 and Acceptance of an Offer by Post’ (1960) 2 MULR 388 at 396. 189. Restatement (2d) Contracts, §63, comment c. 190. [1955] 2 QB 327, followed in eg Mendelson-Zeller Co Inc v T & C Providores Pty Ltd [1981] 1 NSWLR 366; Reese Bros Plastics Ltd v Hamon-Sobelco Australia Pty Ltd (1988) 5 BPR 11,106. See also B Coote, ‘The Instantaneous Transmission of Acceptances’ (1971) 4 NZULR 331. 191. For example, Reese Bros Plastics Ltd v Hamon-Sobelco Australia Pty Ltd (1988) 5 BPR 11,106. 192. See, eg Union Steamship Co v Ewart (1893) 13 NZLR 9 (applying the rule to acceptance by telephone). 193. Brinkibon Ltd v Stahag Stahl GmbH [1983] 2 AC 34 at 42. For a possible example of such a situation see Leach Nominees Pty Ltd v Walter Wright Pty Ltd [1986] WAR 244 (offeror contemplating acceptance by use of the public telex facility). It would follow that where a telex or fax is sent and received outside of normal office hours it may not be regarded as received until the following normal opening hours: see Schelde Delta Shipping BV v Astarte Shipping Ltd (The Pamela) [1995] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 249. 194. Normally the offeree will realise that the message has not been received. But if the offeree reasonably believes that the message has been received and the offeror ought to have realised that this was the case, the offeror may be estopped from saying that the message of acceptance was not received: see Entores Ltd v Miles Far East Corp [1955] 2 QB 327 at 333. 195. See K O’Shea and K Skeahan, ‘Acceptance of Offers by Email — How Far Should the Postal Acceptance Rule Extend?’ (1997) 13 QUTLJ 247; Jeannie Marie Pater-son, ‘Consumer Contracting in the Age of the Digital Natives’ (2011) 27 JCL 152. 196. See generally R T Nimmer, ‘The Legal Landscape of E-commerce: Redefining Contract Law in an Information Era’ (2007) 23 JCL 10. 197. See Eliza Mik, ‘The Effectiveness of Acceptances Communicated by Electronic Means, or — Does the Postal Acceptance Rule Apply to Email?’ (2009) 26 JCL 68. 198. ACT: Electronic Transactions Act 2001; NSW: Electronic Transactions Act 2000; NT: Electronic
Transactions Act 2000; Qld: Electronic Transactions Act 2001, which differs slightly from the other pieces of legislation; SA: Electronic Transactions Act 2000; Tas: Electronic Transactions Act 2000; Vic: Electronic Transactions (Victoria) Act 2000. See also Cth: Electronic Transactions Act 1999; WA: Electronic Transactions Act 2011. For a discussion of the background of the legislation see C Tay, ‘Contracts, Technology and Electronic Commerce: the Evolution Continues’ (1998) 9 JLIS 177; A Upcroft, ‘E-commerce: Global or Local? An Australian Case Study' (1999) 10 JLIS 112. For a discussion of the background to recent amendments see Eliza Mik, ‘“Updating” the Electronic Transactions Act? — Australia’s Accession to the UN Convention on the Use of Electronic Communications in International Contracts 2005’ (2010) 26 JCL 184. 199. Although the section numbers of corresponding provisions may differ, the provisions are the same except under the Electronic Transactions Act 2001 (Qld). 200. See ss 7–9. 201. An electronic communication is defined in s 5 as ‘(a) a communication of information in the form of data, text or images by means of guided or unguided electromagnetic energy, or both or (b) a communication of information in the form of sound by means of guided or unguided electromagnetic energy, or both, where the sound is processed at its destination by an automated voice recognition system’. For the attribution of electronic communications see s 15. 202. For the application of the Act to contracts, see s 14E. 203. An information system is defined in s 5 as a system for ‘generating, sending, receiving, storing or otherwise processing electronic communications’. 204. The provision applies even though the place where the information system supporting an electronic address is located may be different from the place where under s 13B the electronic communication is taken to have been dispatched: s 13B(2). 205. Unless otherwise agreed between the originator and the addressee of the electronic communication, it is to be assumed that the electronic communication is capable of being retrieved by the addressee when it reaches the addressee’s electronic address: s 13A(2). 206. Rules in relation to place of business for the purpose of s 13B(1) are stated in s 13B(2). See also s 13B(3), (4). 207. For the application of Pt 2A, see s 14A. 208. The provision extends to proposals that make use of interactive applications for the placement of orders through information systems: s 14B(2). 209. ‘Automated message system’ means a ‘computer program or an electronic or other automated means used to initiate an action or respond to data messages in whole or in part, without review or intervention by a natural person each time an action is initiated or a response is generated by the system’: s 5. 210. For the application of s 14D, see s 14D(1). 211. R v Clarke (1927) 40 CLR 227 at 231. See also Gjergja v Cooper [1987] VR 167 at 206, 208–11 (acceptance must be ‘truly responsive’ to the offer). 212. See Tinn v Hoffman & Co (1873) 29 LT 271. 213. See Restatement (2d) Contracts, §51. Robinson v McEwan (1865) 2 WW & A’B(L) 65 possibly supports this view, though the facts are somewhat unclear. 214. (1927) 40 CLR 227. 215. The reward was offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons who committed the murders. Clarke’s evidence did not lead to the arrest of one of the convicted murderers (who was arrested before the information was given) and it led only to the conviction of
the persons who committed one of the two murders in question. In cases of this kind, as in any other, offer and acceptance must precisely correspond: see [3-19]–[3-24]. 216. (1833) 5 Car & P 566; 172 ER 1101. 217. See in particular Denman CJ and Littledale J at (1833) 5 Car & P 566 at 574; 172 ER 1101 at 1104. 218. (1927) 40 CLR 227 at 244. 219. (1927) 40 CLR 227 at 241. 220. Starke J entertained doubts as to whether the evidence did in fact go so far, but felt unable to disturb the factual finding made by the trial judge. 221. (1927) 40 CLR 227 at 232. 222. This proposition was applied in Veivers v Cordingley [1989] 2 Qd R 278. 223. [1977] 1 NSWLR 324 at 328. Mahoney JA (at 331) was inclined to the contrary view. As Samuels JA concurred in both judgments it is not clear what view he took on this point. 224. [1977] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 445. 225. Port Jackson Stevedoring Pty Ltd v Salmond & Spraggon (Aust) Pty Ltd (1978) 139 CLR 231 (not discussed before Privy Council (1980) 144 CLR 300). 226. Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch art 657; Cohn, Manual of German Law, 2nd ed, 1968, Vol 1, p 146. See also Restatement (2d) Contracts, §523, comment c. 227. See [3-47]. 228. Re National Savings Bank Association (Hebb’s Case) (1867) LR 4 Eq 9; Re Provincial and Suburban Bank Ltd (1881) 7 VLR(E) 63; Metropolitan Milk Supply (Greater Brisbane) Ltd v Paulsen [1933] St R Qd 53. 229. Routledge v Grant (1828) 4 Bing 653; 130 ER 920; Nyulasy v Rowan (1891) 17 VLR 663; Stevenson Jaques & Co v McLean (1880) 4 QBD 346; Cartwright v Hoogstoel (1911) 105 LT 628. 230. [1962] 3 All ER 386. 231. Financings Ltd v Stimson [1962] 3 All ER 386. 232. Stevenson Jaques & Co v McLean (1880) 5 QBD 346; Re Scottish Petroleum (Maclagan’s case) (1882) 51 LJ Ch 841; Henthorn v Fraser [1892] 2 Ch 27. It would seem reasonable to hold, at least where negotiations have been conducted by post, that a letter of revocation should be effective when delivered to the offeree, even if not in fact read by the offeree until some later time: see Zucker v Straightlace Pty Ltd (1986) 11 NSWLR 87. This raises considerations similar to those referred to at [3-34]. 233. Byrne v Van Tienhoven (1880) 5 CPD 344 at 348–9. 234. (1876) LR 2 Ch D 463. 235. See [3-06]. 236. Little v Trotman (1885) 6 ALT 252; Patterson v Dolman [1908] VLR 354; Cartwright v Hoogstoel (1911) 105 LT 628. 237. Restatement (2d) Contracts, §43, comment d. 238. [1908] VLR 354. 239. See [3-16]. 240. 92 US 73 (1875). 241. Restatement (2d) Contracts, §46, comment b.
242. See [3-55]. 243. See [6-27]. 244. Mountford v Scott [1975] 1 Ch 258. 245. See, eg Gilbert J McCaul (Aust) Pty Ltd v Pitt Club Ltd (1957) 59 SR (NSW) 122 at 123; Mountford v Scott [1975] 1 Ch 258 at 265. 246. See generally on promissory estoppel [7-01]–[7-23]. 247. See, eg Commissioner of Taxes (Qld) v Camphin (1937) 57 CLR 127. 248. Braham v Walker (1961) 104 CLR 366 at 376. 249. See, eg Ballas v Theophilos (No 2) (1957) 98 CLR 193 at 207–8; Karaguleski v Vasil Bros & Co Pty Ltd [1981] 1 NSWLR 267. 250. See, eg Ballas v Theophilos [1958] VR 576; Laybutt v Amoco Aust Pty Ltd (1974) 132 CLR 57 at 75– 6; 4 ALR 482; Traywinds Pty Ltd v Cooper [1989] 1 Qd R 222. 251. See Carter v Hyde (1923) 33 CLR 115 at 123; O’Halloran Enterprises Pty Ltd v Williamson [1979] VR 33; Westminster Estates Pty Ltd v Calleja [1970] 1 NSWR 526. 252. Ballas v Theophilos (No 2) (1957) 98 CLR 193 at 207. See also Carter v Hyde (1923) 33 CLR 115 at 123; Laybutt v Amoco Aust Pty Ltd (1974) 132 CLR 57 at 73. 253. See C J Rossiter, ‘Options to Acquire Interests in Land — Freehold and Leasehold’ (1982) 56 ALJ 576, 624; Farrands, The Law of Options, 1992. 254. See [3-08], [3-27], [3-39]–[3-40]. 255. For a discussion of the distinction see United Dominions Trust (Commercial) Ltd v Eagle Aircraft Services Ltd [1968] 1 WLR 74 at 83–4. 256. Great Northern Railway Co v Witham (1873) LR 9 CP 16 at 19. 257. R v Clarke (1927) 40 CLR 227 at 233. 258. As to acceptance implied from conduct generally see [3-05]. 259. See Treitel’s The Law of Contract, 12th ed, 2007, §2-050. 260. White Trucks Pty Ltd v Riley (1948) 66 WN (NSW) 101 is apparently an example. See also the often cited but ambiguous remarks of Erle CJ in Offord v Davies (1862) 12 CBNS 748 at 757; 142 ER 1336 at 1340. There is considerable authority for this proposition in American law, a good example being Davis v Jacoby 34 P 2d 1026 (1934). Restatement (2d) Contracts, §32 states that in cases of doubt the offeree has the choice of accepting either by promising to perform or rendering performance. The original Restatement (in §531) stated the rule suggested in the text. The change in approach is a consequence of the abandonment in the Restatement (2d) of the distinction between bilateral and unilateral contracts: see §1, Reporter’s Note. 261. See, eg s J Stoljar, ‘The False Distinction between Bilateral and Unilateral Contracts’ (1955) 64 Yale LJ 515. 262. D O McGovney, ‘Irrevocable Offers’ in Selected Readings on the Law of Contracts, 1931, p 300. 263. (1860) Legge 1283; applied in Veivers v Cordingley [1989] 2 Qd R 278. 264. In Daulia Ltd v Four Millbank Nominees Ltd [1978] 1 Ch 231 Goff LJ, with whom Buckley and Orr LJJ agreed, considered that there must be an implied obligation on the part of the offeror not to prevent the condition imposed in his offer becoming satisfied, that obligation arises as soon as the offeree starts to perform. Consequently, once the offeree has embarked upon performance it will be too late for the offeror to revoke.
See Luxor (Eastbourne) Ltd v Cooper [1941] AC 109, especially per Lord Russell at 124. See further 265. [11-09]. 266. See Restatement (2d) Contracts, §45, comment f. 267. (1998) 153 ALR 198. 268. (1998) 153 ALR 198 at 224. Cf Soulsbury v Soulsbury [2008] 1 Fam 1 at 19–20; [2007] EWCA Civ 969 at [49]. 269. (1998) 153 ALR 198 at 228. 270. (1998) 153 ALR 198 at 228. 271. Stevenson Jaques & Co v McLean (1880) 5 QBD 346; Khaled v Athanas Bros (Aden) Ltd (1967) 1 BPR 9310 (PC); Fletcher v Minister for Environment & Heritage (1999) 73 SASR 474. However, in Brambles Holdings Ltd v Bathurst City Council (2001) 53 NSWLR 153 at 179 it was suggested that this principle is not universal. 272. Hyde v Wrench (1840) 3 Beav 334; 49 ER 132; Baker v Taylor (1906) 6 SR (NSW) 500; Harris v Jenkins [1922] SASR 59. 273. Sheffield Canal Co v Sheffield and Rotherham Ry Co (1841) Ry & Can Cas 121; Livingstone v Evans [1925] 4 DLR 769; Khaled v Athanas Bros (Aden) Ltd (1967) 1 BPR 9310 (PC). 274. (1880) 5 QBD 346. 275. Khaled v Athanas Bros (Aden) Ltd (1967) 1 BPR 9310 (PC). See also Fletcher v Minister for Environment & Heritage (1999) 73 SASR 474, where it was held that commencing proceedings amounted to revocation by conduct. 276. See Corbin on Contracts, Vol 1, 1963, p 92. 277. See Restatement (2d) Contracts, §40. Cf C D Ashley, ‘Must the Rejection of an Offer be Communicated to the Offeror’ in Association of American Law Schools, Selected Readings on the Law of Contracts, 1931, p 246. 278. Jacobsen Sons & Co v E Underwood & Son Ltd (1894) 1 SLT 578; Spencer’s Pictures Ltd v Cosens (1918) 18 SR (NSW) 102. See also Nyulasy v Rowan (1891) 17 VLR 663. 279. (1904) 4 SR (NSW) 150. 280. Ballas v Theophilos (No 2) (1957) 98 CLR 193; Manchester Diocesan Council v Commercial & General Investments Ltd [1970] 1 WLR 241. But see Farmers’ Mercantile Union & Chaff Mills Ltd v Coade (1921) 30 CLR 113; Blacktown Municipal Council v Doneo [1971] 1 NSWLR 157. 281. Khaled v Athanas Bros (Aden) Ltd (1967) 1 BPR 9310 (PC). 282. Ballas v Theophilos (No 2) (1957) 98 CLR 193 at 197. 283. Ballas v Theophilos (No 2) (1957) 98 CLR 193. As to option contracts see [3-47]–[3-48]. 284. Quenerduaine v Cole (1883) 32 WR 185. 285. Meynell v Surtees (1855) 25 LJ Ch 257; Dencio v Zivanovic (1991) 105 FLR 117. 286. Manchester Diocesan Council v Commercial & General Investments Ltd [1970] 1 WLR 241. See also Williams v Williams (1853) 17 Beav 213; 151 ER 1015. 287. Khaled v Athanas Bros (Aden) Ltd (1967) 1 BPR 9310 (PC). 288. See David McLauchlan and Rick Bigwood, ‘Lapse of Offers Due to Changed Circumstances: A Contract Conversation’ (2011) 27 JCL 222. 289. Financings Ltd v Stimson [1962] 3 All ER 386. See also Rice v Taylor (1969) 89 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 596 at 602 per Jacobs JA. As to the application of a similar rule where a clause in a lease granting an
option to renew makes exercise of the option conditional on performance by the lessee of all of his or her obligations under the lease see Gilbert J McCaul (Aust) Pty Ltd v Pitt Club Ltd (1957) 59 SR (NSW) 122; B s Stilwell & Co Pty Ltd v Budget Rent-A-Car System Pty Ltd [1990] VR 589 (but cf Traywinds Pty Ltd v Cooper [1989] 1 Qd R 222)). See also United Scientific Holdings Ltd v Burnley BC [1978] AC 904 at 928–9, 945–6, 951, 961–2. See further [28-37]. 290. See Dickinson v Dodds (1876) 2 Ch D 463 at 475; Reynolds v Atherton (1921) 125 LT 690 at 695–6. 291. Fong v Cilli (1968) 11 FLR 495. Contrast Restatement (2d) Contracts, §48 (power of acceptance terminated by death of offeror whether or not offeree has notice of the death). 292. An option may be exercised after the death of the grantor provided that the option was not intended to last only during the life of the grantor and provided that the proposed contract was not personal to the grantor: Laybutt v Amoco Aust Pty Ltd (1974) 132 CLR 57 at 75–6. 293. Reynolds v Atherton (1921) 125 LT 690. 294. See, eg [39-04]. 295. Carter v Hyde (1923) 33 CLR 115; see also Laybutt v Amoco Aust Pty Ltd (1974) 132 CLR 57 at 75– 6. 296. See [3-16].
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Chapter 4
Uncertain and Incomplete Promises [4-01] General principles.1 Even when it may seem that there is a binding contract because the offer corresponds to the acceptance, sometimes there will still be no enforceable contract. Contract results from the agreement of the parties and courts will not write a contract for parties that have failed to reach agreement. The parties may think they had reached finality, but the courts may regard them as not having passed beyond the stage of negotiation. Two related, but conceptually distinct, principles are involved: Uncertainty. The court may be unable to give the parties’ language a sufficiently precise and clear meaning in order to identify the scope of the rights and obligations agreed to. In such a case there is in fact no concluded agreement and the alleged contract will be held to be void for uncertainty. Incompleteness. Even though the language is perfectly clear in its meaning, if some important part of the transaction is yet to be agreed upon there is no completed agreement and the alleged contract will fail for incompleteness. In any given case there may in fact be elements both of uncertainty and incompleteness.2 [4-02] Contracts upheld where possible. Many important business agreements are made informally and will often use language which may seem perfectly adequate to commercial parties no matter how it might appear to the critical mind of the lawyer. Very often an agreement is intended to govern a complex business relationship over an extended period of time and it will in practice be impossible or undesirable to provide for all likely eventualities with the precision which more traditional theory might demand. The general principles applicable have been laid down in fairly clear terms, but a variety of approaches is used to uphold an agreement wherever possible and it is frequently very difficult to apply the general principles with confidence to concrete factual situations. The courts are here faced with a conflict between the desire, on the one hand, to avoid making such efforts to enforce an uncertain or incomplete
agreement [page 92] so that what is enforced is something that the parties did not in fact agree to and, on the other hand, to uphold reasonable expectations of parties who believed they had a contract and to avoid ‘the reproach of being the destroyer of bargains’.3 Courts try to find ways to uphold agreements, especially commercial arrangements. Macfarlan J summarised judicial attitude in Prints for Pleasure Ltd v Oswald-Sealy (Overseas) Ltd:4 … [I]n dealings between business people there cannot always be certainty or predictability about the future course of events arising out of or in the performance of a business relationship which they desire to, and may lawfully, create. The course of business often means that this must be so and it would, as Lord Tomlin said,5 be a reproach upon the law if parties who intended to agree, and believed they had agreed in this way, should be told that their agreement for legal reasons had never come into existence. In the present case the agreement was concerned with establishing throughout a period of time in the future marketing and business relations between the applicant and the respondent but the performance of that agreement according to its provisions plainly envisaged that future acts would be done and decisions made while this relationship continued to exist … In a business relationship of this kind, which was intended to exist throughout some time in the future, it is in my opinion inevitable that the shifts and changes of events, over many of which the parties could not have any control, would produce unpredictable influences upon such a business relationship.
Uncertainty [4-03] Difficulty of interpretation distinguished from absence of meaning. Courts will interpret the language used broadly and fairly (especially when approaching a document drafted by laypersons).6 They will place a reasonable meaning on the language unless this is ‘utterly impossible’.7 Difficulty of interpretation must be distinguished from absence of meaning.8 Just because a contract can have more than one possible meaning it is not therefore void for uncertainty. As long as it is capable of a meaning, it will ultimately bear that meaning which the court, or in an appropriate case, an arbitrator decides is its proper construction. And the court or arbitrator will decide its application. The question becomes one of construction, of ascertaining the intention of the parties, and of applying it. So long as the language employed by the parties, to use Lord Wright’s words in G Scammell & Nephew Ltd v Ouston,9 is not ‘so
[page 93] obscure and so incapable of any definite or precise meaning that the court is unable to attribute to the parties any particular contractual intention’, the contract cannot be held to be void or uncertain or meaningless. In searching for that intention, a narrow or pedantic approach cannot be justified, particularly in the case of commercial arrangements. [4-04] External standard. Provisions which are apparently vague or uncertain can frequently be given substance if there is some external yardstick or standard which will give the content of the agreement a more precise definition.10 So, an agreement to hire a motor car on the terms of the ‘usual hiring agreement’ of the plaintiff or of any other company nominated by the plaintiff has been held valid.11 The agreement gave a very wide discretion to the plaintiff, but once the plaintiff nominated a company which did in fact have a ‘usual’ hiring agreement used by it the obligations of the parties were sufficiently defined. It is also common for the parties to agree expressly on some aspects of their bargain and then to provide that, except as inconsistent with the express agreement, the parties are bound by the terms of a nominated standard form contract. Once that standard form is identified, the content of the parties’ agreement is clear.12 On the other hand, an agreement to take a motor vehicle on ‘hire-purchase terms’ was held void when it appeared that there were a great variety of hire-purchase terms in use.13 Had there been evidence that there were, as a matter of fact and commercial practice, any ‘usual’ hire-purchase terms in general use the court would have had a yardstick by which to establish the scope of the obligation. In Whitlock v Brew14 an agreement for the sale of land provided that the purchaser would grant a lease of a defined portion of the land to a named oil company. The land was to be used for the purposes of a petrol station (already established there) and the lease was to be ‘upon such reasonable terms as commonly govern such a lease’. It was held that the provision was void as it neither provided a means for determining the length of the lease nor the rent payable. There was no evidence that there was in fact any set of reasonable terms in common use for leases of this kind, but even if there had been such evidence it may not have assisted on the vital points of the length of the lease and the rent. [4-05] Reasonableness standard. On other occasions the standard of reasonableness will be called in aid. In Hillas & Co Ltd v Arcos Ltd15 buyers
[page 94] agreed to buy from Russian sellers ‘22,000 standards of Russian softwood goods of fair specification over the season 1930’. The agreement also contained an option for the buyers to take a further ‘100,000 standards for delivery during 1931’. The option clause did not specify what kinds, sizes or qualities of timber were to be supplied nor did it define the dates and ports of shipment and discharge. The House of Lords held that the option must be read as requiring the standards to be ‘of fair specification’ and that in the case of the parties disagreeing the court could ascertain what quality, times of delivery etc would be reasonable in the circumstances. The court was influenced, as in many other cases, by the fact that the parties themselves thought they had a concluded agreement. The fact that the parties themselves had, by their actions in carrying out the sale and purchase of 22,000 standards under the initial part of the contract, attributed meaning to the agreement was also important. As we shall see later, where an agreement has been partly performed the courts are particularly reluctant to hold it void for uncertainty. Courts also look to the understanding or practice of business people to provide certainty. Thus, in Three Rivers Trading Co Ltd v Gwinear & District Farmers Ltd16 it was held that a contract for the sale of ‘400 tons approximately’ of barley was valid. The word ‘approximately’ could be given a sufficient meaning by commercial people and the contract would be satisfied by a delivery of such quantity as was practicable, delivery of a ton or so short of (or in excess of) 400 tons being a good delivery under the contract. [4-06] Effect of provision not immediately ascertainable.In many cases the exact implications of a phrase will be uncertain in the sense that its exact implications in a given situation may be seen only when certain unascertained facts have been ascertained. If, for example, a farmer agrees to sell the whole of a currently growing crop of wheat at a certain figure per bushell, the total price will not be known until the crop has been harvested and the quantity produced measured. But when this has been done the price can be easily ascertained. As the contract itself provides the necessary standard and nothing depends on future agreement between the parties, the contract is enforceable. Likewise, Barwick CJ once remarked that a contract to build a bridge ‘at cost’ would be enforceable: ‘to my mind, generally speaking, the concept of a cost of doing something is certain in the sense that it provides a criterion by reference to which the rights of the parties may ultimately and logically be worked out, if not by the
parties then by the courts’.17 [4-07] ‘Rise and fall’ clauses. The principle referred to in the previous paragraph is frequently relied upon in the context of contracts (such as building and engineering contracts) that are performed over a period of time. Where a contractor agrees to complete a project for a specified sum, the contract price is fixed even though subsequent increases in the costs of [page 95] labour and materials may render the contract quite unprofitable. To overcome this problem, the parties will often agree on a ‘rise and fall’ clause under which the price may be adjusted in the event of defined variations in costs. (The price is in general much more likely to rise than to fall, but in the case of some materials there can be quite marked fluctuations up or down in market prices.) A rise and fall clause is designed to define those cost alterations which may be taken into account and to provide some formula for calculating the adjusted price. Some such clauses are extremely complex and frequently refer to indexes of the costs of materials and labour produced by the Australian Bureau of Statistics or other bodies.18 [4-08] Area of operation uncertain. Another form of uncertainty is where the operation of the agreement is unclear either because there is no set of facts upon which it can operate or because there is more than one set of facts and the agreement does not indicate the set on which it is to operate. In such a case the agreement fails because the area of its operation is not stated with certainty. Thus in Mercantile Credits Ltd v Harry19 the defendant named two persons to guarantee their lease obligations with the plaintiff. There were in fact two leases between these persons and the plaintiff which answered the description in the guarantee, but as the terms of the guarantee made it clear that it related to one lease only and the guarantee did not define to which of the leases it referred, the plaintiff’s action on the guarantee failed. [4-09] Uncertainty and intention to contract. Some cases have involved an arrangement where the plaintiff agreed to look after an elderly person for the rest of their life in return for a vague promise of future reward. The issue usually arises when the elderly person dies without having made provision (or having made what is alleged to be an inadequate provision) for the other. The facts of the cases, of course, vary in the degree of uncertainty involved, but in a number
of cases it has been held that the arrangement was too uncertain to be contractual (though in some cases a reasonable sum may be recovered even though there is no contract).20 In other cases, however, an arrangement of this type will be upheld.21 A similar case is Wakeling v Ripley,22 where a husband and wife were persuaded by the wife’s brother to come to Australia and live with him there, in return for his promise to leave them all his property on his death and in the meantime to provide them with a home and ‘living’. The [page 96] contract might have been held unenforceable if it had been challenged before there had been any performance. However, the dispute did not arise until some time after the husband and wife had taken up residence in Australia, which involved serious steps for them as they had sold their home in England and the husband had resigned his university lectureship.23 It was held that they were entitled to damages for breach of contract. It should be noted that Wakeling v Ripley turned mainly on the question of whether the parties intended that their agreement should be legally enforceable. As is shown later,24 there is a presumption (which may be, as was the case here, rebutted) that domestic arrangements are not intended to be legally enforceable. Uncertainty in the terms of such an agreement is often relevant as a factor indicating that the agreement is not intended to be legally enforceable.25
Incompleteness [4-10] Agreement incomplete. A contract will fail for incompleteness where some essential or important part of the bargain is yet to be agreed.26 In a contract of sale, price is obviously a vital element and therefore there will be no contract if the parties provide that the price is to be agreed by them at a future date. This principle has been applied where a lease contains an option for the lessee to enter into a renewal of the lease at a rental to be agreed and it has been held that in such cases the option will be void.27 It is otherwise, however, if a contract of sale or lease provides that in default of agreement between the parties the rental or price is to be determined according to some formula or machinery not depending on further agreement between the parties.28 This may be determined by a named third party or pursuant to a clause providing for arbitration, provided that the
arbitration clause is drawn so as to cover this matter. Where the parties have agreed to the essential terms and other matters are left to be determined by one side’s solicitors, the contract is valid, at least where it is expressly or impliedly provided that the solicitors must act [page 97] reasonably.29 A question arises as to whether the court itself can intervene in appropriate cases where the machinery established in the contract to determine an essential matter breaks down (for example, where one party refuses to appoint a valuer). In Sudbrook Trading Estate Ltd v Eggleton30 the House of Lords held that it could, but the position in Australia is as yet not clear.31 [4-11] Implication of terms. A seemingly incomplete agreement may be enforced because the courts will imply in the contract terms relating to essential matters which the parties themselves have not expressly dealt with. These terms may be implied in law or from the particular facts.32 On the other hand, ‘the law does not permit a court to imply a term into a bargain between parties for the purposes of making their bargain an enforceable contract’.33 What this statement indicates is that the greater the number of important matters not expressly dealt with the more likely it is that the court will conclude that the parties had not finally agreed on a bargain. If the contract in question is ‘one of the kind with which courts have a lawyerly familiarity’ courts ‘may feel confident enough in their ability to fill in the gaps which the parties have left’. However, the courts may be reluctant to imply a term if the contract is a novel or complex commercial undertaking dependent on factors ‘incapable of being readily valued according to pre-existing or reasonable ascertainable external standards’.34 Where the court concludes that the parties had reached a bargain, terms can be implied in various contexts. For example, reference was made earlier to an ‘open’ contract for the sale of land35 where, provided that the parties have identified the parties to the sale, the property and the price, terms will be implied as to the many other matters (and which are usually agreed upon expressly in a formal contract). Similarly, where an agreement for the supply of services or the sale of goods is silent as to the price, there is an implied obligation to pay a reasonable sum. This is the situation at least where the services have been performed or the goods delivered. Where a purely executory contract provides for the payment of a reasonable price (or uses a similar
formula, such as ‘stock at valuation’) the better view is that the contract is enforceable. This is probably also true [page 98] even if nothing is said about price, provided that it is clear that the parties were not still negotiating.36 In May & Butcher Ltd v R37 an agreement for the sale of tentage at prices to be agreed upon was held unenforceable because price was a vital term that had still to be agreed between the parties. The court refused to imply a term that a reasonable price would be paid, because this would impose a provision inconsistent with the express provisions of the contract. On the other hand, in Foley v Classique Coaches Ltd38 the plaintiff sold land to the proprietors of a motor coach business subject to the purchasers entering a separate agreement to purchase from the plaintiff, who owned a petrol station on adjoining land still owned by him, all the petrol required for their business ‘at a price to be agreed by the parties … from time to time’. The land was conveyed and three years later the purchasers claimed they were not bound to purchase petrol from the plaintiffs. It was held that a term must be implied that the petrol sold was to be of reasonable quality and at a reasonable price and that if there were any dispute between the parties on the latter point this should be determined by arbitration under the arbitration clause contained in the contract. The two cases are not easy to reconcile though there were a number of distinctions drawn between this contract and that in May & Butcher. An important factor was that in Foley the parties had acted under the contract for three years and an important consideration in the plaintiff’s mind in selling the land at the agreed price was obviously his expectation of continued benefit from sales of petrol. [4-12] Executed contracts. Where a contract appears incomplete but has been largely performed by one or both parties, the courts are much more likely to imply terms in order to avoid the injustice which would arise if a party who had performed was unable to enforce the contract against the other party. ‘In a commercial agreement the further the parties have gone on with their contract, the more ready are the courts to imply any reasonable term so as to give effect to their intentions.’39 A similar approach is adopted where a contract is uncertain. ‘When the parties have shown by their conduct that they understand and can apply the terms of a contract without difficulty, a court should be very reluctant
indeed to pay no attention to such conduct by holding that the terms of the contract are unintelligible by reason of uncertainty.’40 In such situations the courts tend to uphold the contract on the basis that by their actions in performance the [page 99] parties have supplied the elements which previously were absent. (This was an important factor in the decision of the House of Lords in Hillas & Co Ltd v Arcos Ltd.41) The same end result is sometimes reached on the basis,42 that an implied contract, incorporating as many as possible of the terms of the original agreement, has come into existence.43 [4-13] Party having wide discretion as to performance. We have already seen that no contract results where an essential part of an agreement is left to the future agreement of the parties. Similarly, no contract results where one party retains a discretion as to whether or not to perform, because this amounts to illusory consideration, which is discussed later.44 The fact that a party is given a wide latitude of choice as to how to perform does not make the agreement void, so long as nothing is left for future agreement between the parties and so long as the area of choice is clear. The distinction was discussed by Menzies J in Thorby v Goldberg:45 It is an objection to a contract if one party is left to choose whether he will perform it but it is an entirely different matter if there is an obligation to do a specified thing of a general description but it is left to the party who is to perform it to choose the particular thing that he will do in performance of it. An arrangement with an artist that he should for a specified fee paint a portrait of a particular person if the artist, upon seeing the proposed sitter, should decide to do so would be no contract to paint a portrait whereas an arrangement that the artist would for a specified fee paint a portrait of such person as he, the artist, should choose would be a contract.
[4-14] Good faith and agreements to negotiate.46 An agreement to agree is not enforceable as a contract.47 Until recently an agreement to negotiate in the future on some fundamental matter was also not regarded as enforceable, either on the basis that the agreement is uncertain or that the consideration is illusory.48 The approach favoured by Lord Wright49 was to say that in such a case there was, if there were good consideration, in strict theory a binding contract to negotiate, even though damages might often be nominal because of the uncertain value of the opportunity to negotiate. As a result of the decision of the House of Lords in 1992 in Walford v Miles50 English law has clearly opted for the conclusion that an agreement to negotiate in good faith is unenforceable. However, in Coal Cliff
Collieries Pty Ltd v Sijehama Pty Ltd,51 Kirby P, with whom Waddell [page 100] A-JA agreed ‘generally’, rejected the notion that a contract to negotiate in good faith is unknown to the law and agreed with Lord Wright that such a promise would in some cases, depending on its terms and construction, be enforceable. Handley JA, on the other hand, considered that a promise to negotiate in good faith is illusory and cannot be binding, there being ‘no identifiable criteria by which the content of the obligation to negotiate in good faith can be determined’.52 The view of the majority in the Coal Cliff case is correct in principle, though in many cases a successful plaintiff will have difficulty in recovering more than nominal damages. It is significant that the majority in the Coal Cliff case, despite their view on the point of principle, held that on the facts of that case the promise was unenforceable and that, even were that not so, there were too many imponderable factors ‘to venture what might have been achieved in good faith negotiations had they continued’53 and that as a result the plaintiff would in any event have been unable to recover more than nominal damages.54
Severance [4-15] Omission of invalid clause. Because courts seek to uphold wherever possible an agreement which the parties believe is binding, they will attempt to ‘sever’ the void part of a contract that is either too vague or incomplete. Where severance is possible the void clause is ignored and the rest of the contract enforced. If severance is not possible the whole contract must fail. For example, in Whitlock v Brew,55 which was discussed earlier,56 the clause providing for a lease of a portion of the land agreed to be sold was held to be void for uncertainty. As this provision was a material part of the agreement it was inseverable, so the whole contract was void. Most of the cases dealing with the question of whether a void clause can be severed have arisen in the context of provisions which are illegal or void on the grounds of public policy, and are discussed in that context.57 The [page 101]
Australian cases show, however, that the question can equally arise in the context of vague or incomplete contracts. Where a provision relating to some inessential or incidental matter is meaningless there will usually be little difficulty in deciding that the provision may be severed.58 The test to be applied is whether the parties must be taken to have intended that the offending provision should be severable. Another way of putting this is to ask whether the parties intended that, if the clause in question could not for any reason take effect, the whole contract must fail.59 If the answer to this question of construction is ‘no’, then even a clause relating to a quite important matter will be severable.60 1.
H K Lücke, ‘Illusory, Vague and Uncertain Contractual Terms’ (1977) 6 Adel LR 1.
2.
A good example is G Scammell & Nephew Ltd v Ouston [1941] AC 251 (see [4-04]).
3.
Hillas & Co Ltd v Arcos Ltd (1932) 147 LT 503 at 512 per Lord Tomlin.
4.
[1968] 3 NSWR 761 at 765–6. See also Cudgen Rutile (No 2) Pty Ltd v Chalk [1975] AC 520; (1974) 49 ALJR 22; Anaconda Nickel Ltd v Tramoola Australia Pty Ltd (2000) 22 WAR 101.
5.
Hillas & Co Ltd v Arcos Ltd (1932) 147 LT 503 at 512.
6.
See Hillas & Co Ltd v Arcos Ltd (1932) 147 LT 503 at 514; Cohen v Mason [1961] Qd R 518.
7.
Brown v Gould [1972] Ch 53 at 57; Hammond v Vam Ltd [1972] 2 NSWLR 16 at 18. See also Murphy v Wright (1992) NSW Conv R 55–652 at 59-733.
8.
Upper Hunter County District Council v Australian Chilling & Freezing Co Ltd (1968) 118 CLR 429 at 436–7 per Barwick CJ. See also Waldrom v Tsimiklis (1975) 12 SASR 481; Anaconda Nickel Ltd v Tarmoola Australia Pty Ltd (2000) 22 WAR 101.
9.
[1941] AC 251 at 268.
10.
See generally Peters Ice Cream (Vic) Ltd v Todd [1961] VR 485; Placer Development Ltd v The Commonwealth (1969) 121 CLR 353; Biotechnology Australia Pty Ltd v Pace (1988) 15 NSWLR 130.
11.
Allcars Pty Ltd v Tweedle [1937] VLR 35. The total rental and the terms of payment were set out in the agreement.
12.
See, eg Trustees Executors & Agency Co Ltd v Peters (1960) 102 CLR 537; Sidney Eastman Pty Ltd v Southern [1963] NSWR 815.
13.
G Scammell & Nephew Ltd v Ouston [1941] AC 251.
14.
(1968) 118 CLR 445. Cf Hobbs Padgett & Co (Reinsurance) Ltd v J C Kirkland Ltd [1969] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 547. See also Corser v Commonwealth General Assurance Corp Ltd [1963] NSWR 225; Bishop v Taylor (1968) 118 CLR 518; Myam Pty Ltd v Teskera [1971] VR 725.
15.
(1932) 147 LT 503. See also King v Ivanhoe Gold Corp Ltd (1908) 7 CLR 617.
16.
(1967) 111 Sol Jo 831.
17.
Upper Hunter County District Council v Australian Chilling & Freezing Co Ltd (1968) 118 CLR 429 at 437. But see Trawl Industries of Australia Pty Ltd v Effem Foods Pty Ltd (1992) 27 NSWLR 326.
18.
For examples of cases where a rise and fall clause was argued to be uncertain see Upper Hunter
County District Council v Australian Chilling & Freezing Co Ltd (1968) 118 CLR 429; Timmerman v Nervina Industries (International) Pty Ltd [1983] 1 Qd R 1. 19.
[1969] 2 NSWR 248. See also Re Nudgee Bakery Pty Ltd’s Agreement [1971] Qd R 24.
20.
See Shiels v Drysdale (1880) 6 VLR (E) 126; Horton v Jones (1935) 53 CLR 475; Reynolds v McGregor [1973] QL 314. As to recovery on quantum meruit where there is no actionable agreement in existence, see [38-17], [38-18].
21.
See O’Sullivan v National Trustees Executors & Agency Co of A’sia Ltd [1913] VLR 173; Palmer v Bank of NSW [1973] 2 NSWLR 244 (affirmed on other grounds (1975) 133 CLR 150).
22.
(1951) 51 SR (NSW) 183.
23.
As to the significance of a contract having been largely performed see [4-12].
24.
Chapter 8.
25.
See, eg Jones v Padavatton [1969] 1 WLR 328; Gould v Gould [1970] 1 QB 275. As to the relationship between uncertainty and intention to contract see also Anaconda Nickel Ltd v Tarmoola Australia Pty Ltd (2000) 22 WAR 101.
26.
See, eg Hempel v Robinson [1924] SASR 288; May & Butcher Ltd v R (1929) [1934] 2 KB 17n; South Australia v The Commonwealth (1962) 108 CLR 131 at 145; Stocks & Holdings (Constructors) Pty Ltd v Arrowsmith (1964) 112 CLR 647; RTS Flexible Systems Ltd v Molkerei Alois Müller GmbH & Co KG (UK Production) [2010] 1 WLR 753 at 771–2; [2010] UKSC 14 at [45], [49]. As to the ambiguity of ‘essential’ in this context see Pagnan SpA v Feed Products Ltd [1987] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 601.
27.
Eudunda Farmers Co-operative Society Ltd v Mattiske (1920) SALR 309; King’s Motors (Oxford) Ltd v Lax [1970] 1 WLR 426 (doubted by the English Court of Appeal in Carson v Rhuddlan Borough Council (1989) 59 P & CR 185). Cf Thomas Bates & Son Ltd v Wyndham’s Lingerie Ltd [1981] 1 WLR 505; Trazray Pty Ltd v Russell Foundries Pty Ltd (1988) NSW Conv R 55–393.
28.
Brown v Gould [1972] Ch 53; Booker Industries Pty Ltd v Wilson Parking (Qld) Pty Ltd (1982) 149 CLR 600; 43 ALR 68; Sudbrook Trading Estate Ltd v Eggleton [1983] 1 AC 444.
29.
Sweet & Maxwell Ltd v Universal News Services Ltd [1964] 2 QB 699; Godecke v Kirwan (1973) 129 CLR 629.
30.
[1983] 1 AC 444.
31.
See Booker Industries Pty Ltd v Wilson Parking (Qld) Pty Ltd (1982) 149 CLR 600 (but compare Brooks v Wyatt (1992) 112 FLR 12 where Kearney J regarded the majority in Booker Industries as having approved the reasoning of Lord Diplock in Sudbrook Estates). See also WMC Resources Ltd v Leighton Contractors Pty Ltd (1999) 20 WAR 489 (where a contract provides a value to be determined by an agreed valuer without specifying criteria, the value would only be open to challenge if the valuer had not acted honestly and in good faith).
32.
As to this distinction see [11-13].
33.
Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Frost Holdings Pty Ltd [1989] VR 695 at 702, relying on Aotearoa International Ltd v Scancarriers A/S [1985] 1 NZLR 513 at 556 (PC). See Brian Coote, ‘Contract Formation and the Implication of Terms’ (1993) 6 JCL 51.
34.
Trawl Industries of Australia Pty Ltd v Effem Foods Pty Ltd (1992) 27 NSWLR 326 at 332–3, 334 per Kirby P. See also Coal Cliff Collieries Pty Ltd v Sijehama Pty Ltd (1991) 24 NSWLR 1 at 38; Vroon BV v Foster’s Brewing Group Ltd [1994] 2 VR 32.
35.
[3-09].
36.
Wenning v Robinson [1964–65] NSWR 614. As to sale of goods see [38-18]. In Australia Hall v Busst (1960) 104 CLR 206 seems to provide that a contract for the sale of land will be void even when it
expressly provides that the price shall be a reasonable price (though relief may sometimes be possible where possession has been taken of the land). The position is different in England: Sudbrook Trading Estate Ltd v Eggleton [1983] 1 AC 444. In Booker Industries Pty Ltd v Wilson Parking (Qld) Pty Ltd (1982) 149 CLR 600 Brennan J suggested that Hall v Busst may require reconsideration in light of this decision. 37.
(1929) [1934] 2 KB 17n. Cf Smith v Morgan [1971] 1 WLR 803.
38.
[1934] 2 KB 1.
39.
F & G Sykes (Wessex) Ltd v Fine Fare Ltd [1967] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 53 at 57; see also Sudbrook Trading Estate Ltd v Eggleton [1983] 1 AC 144. Cf Carr v Brisbane City Council [1956] St R Qd 402.
40.
York Air Conditioning and Refrigeration (A’sia) Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth (1949) 80 CLR 11 at 53.
41.
(1932) 147 LT 503 (see [4-05]).
42.
Contrast H K Lücke, ‘Illusory, Vague and Uncertain Contractual Terms’ (1977) 6 Adel LR 1 at 9–11.
43.
British Bank for Foreign Trade Ltd v Novinex [1949] 1 KB 623.
44.
See [6-36]–[6-40].
45.
(1965) 112 CLR 597 at 613 (see also at 605). See also Biotechnology Australia Pty Ltd v Pace (1988) 15 NSWLR 130; Gregory v MAB Pty Ltd (1989) 1 WAR 1.
46.
See J W Carter and M P Furmston, ‘Good Faith and Fairness in the Negotiation of Contracts’ (1994) 8 JCL 1 and 93.
47.
Booker Industries Pty Ltd v Wilson Parking (Qld) Pty Ltd (1982) 149 CLR 600; 43 ALR 68; Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Fortescue Metals Group Ltd (2011) 274 ALR 731 at 769; [2011] FCAFC 19 at [121].
48.
Carr v Brisbane City Council [1956] St R Qd 402. Cf Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Fortescue Metals Group Ltd (2011) 274 ALR 731 at 770; [2011] FCAFC 19 at [121].
49.
Hillas & Co Ltd v Arcos Ltd (1932) 147 LT 503 at 515.
50.
[1992] 2 AC 128. In that case Lord Ackner, with whom all their Lordships agreed, said that ‘the concept of a duty to carry on negotiations in good faith is inherently repugnant to the adversarial position of the parties when involved in negotiations’ and that such a duty ‘is as unworkable in practice as it is inherently inconsistent with the position of a negotiating party’. See I Brown, ‘The Contract to Negotiate: a Thing Writ in Water?’ [1992] JBL 353.
51.
(1991) 24 NSWLR 1. As to the enforceability of an agreement to submit a dispute to conciliation or mediation see Elizabeth Bay Developments Pty Ltd v Boral Building Services Pty Ltd (1995) 36 NSWLR 709; Aiton Australia Pty Ltd v Transfield Pty Ltd (1999) 153 FLR 236.
52.
(1991) 24 NSWLR 1 at 33. Coal Cliff has been applied since: see, eg Australis Media Holdings Pty Ltd v Telstra Corporation Ltd (1998) 43 NSWLR 104; Aiton v Transfield (2000) 16 BCL 60; (1999) 153 FLR 236. See also United Group Rail Services Ltd v Rail Corporation of New South Wales (2009) 74 NSWLR 618 at 632; [2009] NSWCA 177 at [50].
53.
(1991) 24 NSWLR 1 at 32. See also Westfield Holdings Ltd v ACT Television Pty Ltd (1992) 5 BPR 11,615.
54.
See also Jeannie Marie Paterson, ‘The Contract to Negotiate in Good Faith: Recognition and Enforcement’ (1996) 10 JCL 120.
55.
(1968) 118 CLR 445.
56.
See [4-04].
57.
See [27-29]–[27-39].
58.
See, eg Bosaid v Andry [1963] VR 465; Caltex Oil (Aust) Pty Ltd v Alderton [1964–65] NSWR 456.
59.
See, eg Fitzgerald v Masters (1956) 95 CLR 420; Brew v Whitlock (No 2) [1967] VR 803; Whitlock v Brew (1968) 118 CLR 445.
60.
See, eg David Jones Ltd v Lunn (1969) 91 WN (NSW) 468; South Coast Oils (Qld & NSW) Pty Ltd v Look Enterprises Pty Ltd [1988] 1 Qd R 680.
[page 102]
Chapter 5
Conditional Promises [5-01] Introduction. This chapter explains the operation of ‘subject to …’ clauses. An agreement that is made ‘subject to …’ some event usually makes the contract, or a part of the contract, conditional on the occurrence of the particular event. While the most common form of these clauses are ‘subject to contract’ clauses, similar principles apply whatever the condition that needs to be satisfied. There are always three questions that must be asked: What is the purpose of the clause? Did the parties intend that there would be no binding agreement until the condition occurs? Or have the parties agreed that only performance is delayed until the satisfaction of the condition? What is the content of the clause? When will the condition be taken to be fulfilled? What is the position if the condition is not fulfilled? What are the consequences of non-fulfilment of the condition?
Subject to Contract [5-02] General principles. Often a document has been signed which looks capable of constituting a binding contract, but the document indicates that the parties contemplate that later a further formal contract will be written and executed. Is the first document a binding agreement? Or will the parties only be bound when, if ever, the formal contract comes into force? The leading Australian case is Masters v Cameron1 in which it was said: Where parties who have been in negotiation reach agreement upon terms of a contractual nature and also agree that the matter of their negotiation shall be dealt with by a formal contract, the case may belong to any of three classes. It may be one in which the parties have reached finality in arranging all the terms of their bargain and intend to be immediately bound to the performance of those terms, but at the same time propose to have the terms restated in a form which will be fuller or more precise but not different in effect. Or, secondly, it may be a case in which the parties have completely agreed upon all the terms of their bargain and intend no departure from or addition to that which their agreed terms
express or imply, but nevertheless have made performance of one or more of the terms conditional upon the execution of a formal document. Or, thirdly, the case may be one in which
[page 103] the intention of the parties is not to make a concluded bargain at all, unless and until they execute a formal contract.
In cases falling within the first two categories referred to in Masters v Cameron the parties are immediately bound. In these cases, but not when the third is applicable, the parties have reached finality in negotiating the terms of their bargain and intend to be bound but yet intend to have those terms stated later in a form which is fuller or more precise. [5-03] First category. An example of a case falling within the first class is Branca v Cobarro2 where a written agreement for the sale of a mushroom farm was stated to be a ‘provisional agreement until a fully legalised agreement’ was drawn up and signed. It was held that the provisional agreement was fully effective until such time (if ever) that the further agreement was drawn up and signed. So neither party could withdraw. In cases of this type laypeople have often drawn up the initial agreement themselves but want it to be ‘put into a more formal and professional shape’3 by a solicitor who will, however, not be able to vary the agreement. Strictly speaking, the latter agreement could not, as a purely grammatical matter, have precisely the same effect as the original agreement4 and the more formal agreement, once entered into, discharges and replaces the earlier agreement.5 [5-04] Second category. Cases falling into the second category are uncommon. In these cases there is also an immediately binding contract. In Niesmann v Collingridge6 an option provided that the defendant granted the plaintiff ‘the firm offer’ of certain land at a stated price, part to be payable ‘on the signing of the contract’, part three months afterwards and the balance three years after the signing of the contract. It was held that there was an immediately binding contract. The execution of the formal contract was not a condition of the existence of a binding contract, but the obligation to pay the price by instalments was conditional on that execution. The agreement was not expressed to be ‘subject to’ the execution of a formal contract, the reason for the reference to that contract being to fix the date of payment of the first and subsequent instalments of purchase money.
Consequently, the first step in carrying out specific performance is the ordering of the execution of a formal contract. [5-05] Third category. The third, and most common, type of case referred to in Masters v Cameron is where the parties intend that they are not bound unless and until the formal contract comes into force.7 The parties may not intend any further negotiation about the terms of their bargain but [page 104] want the flexibility to withdraw until that later stage. Very commonly this is done where intending purchasers of a house have entered an informal agreement but wish to consult their solicitor before finally binding themselves. The phrases ‘subject to contract’ and ‘subject to the preparation of a formal contract’ create a strong presumption that the agreement is not binding.8 The presumption is particularly strong where ‘subject to contract’ is used. Where the parties merely contemplate the subsequent execution of a formal contract, but do not express their agreement to be subject to or conditional upon the execution of a formal contract it is a question of construction whether the parties intended to be immediately bound.9 Although subsequent conduct of the parties may generally not be referred to in construing the terms of a contract,10 such conduct may be considered when the question is whether prior dealings between the parties gave rise to a binding contract.11 But even where there is an express clause to the effect that execution of a formal document is a condition precedent to entry into a contract, the parties may by their conduct dispense with that requirement, as recently occurred in RTS Flexible Systems Ltd v Molkerei Alois Müller GmbH & Co KG (UK Production).12 Most cases where there is no binding agreement until the execution of the formal contract have been agreements relating to land. In fact, in New South Wales where there is a practice that real estate is sold by exchange of contracts, there is a rebuttable presumption that there is no contract until exchange, even where there is written evidence of a putative contract.13 An immediately binding contract may more readily be found with at least some other types of agreement.14 Vagueness in an important clause in the agreement is another factor which may influence the court to hold that the parties are not bound until the formal contract is executed.15
If there is no binding contract and a deposit has been paid, it is normally inferred that the payment was an anticipatory one, pending the execution of the formal contract, and that until this occurs it may be recovered by the intending purchaser.16 [page 105] [5-06] Fourth category? There are cases where the parties intend to be bound immediately while expecting to make a later more formal document containing by agreement additional terms. Some cases17 suggest these situations amount to a fourth class of case. While it would be possible to conceive of several further categories to those identified in Masters v Cameron,18 the High Court intended to identify three points on a continuum of transactions. The initial agreement in situations where parties are bound by an agreement to execute a formal document containing additional terms falls within the second category because the first agreement will be enforceable unless superseded by a later agreement.19
Subject to Finance [5-07] Introduction. 20 An agreement for the sale of land will sometimes state that it is made subject to finance being obtained. The object of such a provision is to give the purchaser a way to avoid being liable if unable to obtain the needed loan, while protecting the vendor by preventing the purchaser from resiling for some reason unrelated to the availability of finance. Usually financial institutions will not commit themselves to granting a loan until they have inspected the property involved and the process of granting final approval of the loan can take some time. If the purchasers do bind themselves and the loan is subsequently refused, the purchasers will usually be forced to breach the contract and will be liable to forfeit to the vendor any deposit (usually a substantial amount in contracts for the sale of land) they have paid on entering into the contract.21 The purchaser in such a case might usually prefer to obtain an option for such period as is likely to be needed to arrange finance, but this approach will often be unattractive to the vendor because during the period of validity of the option the vendor cannot sell to anyone else, while the purchaser has a complete discretion as to whether or not to proceed with the purchase.22 A ‘subject to finance’ clause represents an attempt to balance the interests of both
parties. The decision of the High Court in Meehan v Jones23 settled the Australian law about the operation of subject to finance clauses. In Meehan [page 106] v Jones a contract for the sale of land contained a clause stating that the contract was executed subject to ‘the purchaser or his nominee receiving approval for finance on satisfactory terms and conditions in an amount sufficient to complete the purchase’. In an action by the purchaser for specific performance it was held that the contract was valid. The finance clause was not void for uncertainty, nor did it mean the purchaser’s consideration was illusory. [5-08] Fulfilment of the condition. In Meehan v Jones,24 the High Court held that the finance clause meant that the purchaser could decide whether the terms on which finance was available were satisfactory. It was not necessary on the facts to decide whether the test as to his satisfaction was subjective (finance which he honestly considered satisfactory) or objective (finance which ought reasonably to satisfy him).25 Whichever interpretation is correct, such a clause will not be void for uncertainty. Gibbs CJ said:26 If the words of the condition are understood to import a subjective test … it is impossible in my opinion to regard the condition as uncertain. The question whether the purchaser does think the finance satisfactory is a simple question of fact … On the other hand, if the test is an objective one, and the question is whether the finance ought reasonably to be regarded as satisfactory, I should not have thought that the clause is too indefinite for the courts to be able to attribute any particular contractual intention to the parties.
Mason J said that the purchaser’s obligation to act at least honestly (and perhaps honestly and reasonably) in considering whether the finance available was satisfactory meant it was not a case where one party had a discretion as to whether or not to perform.27 Murphy J held that there was no justification for implying that the purchaser must act reasonably and remarked that ‘implication of the word “honest” as qualifying the satisfaction adds nothing’.28 Although many difficult questions will still arise as to the precise obligations of the parties, it now appears that normally where a contract for the sale of land contains a clause stating that the contract is ‘subject to finance’ or some similar phrase, the contract will be valid.
Other Conditional Contracts [5-09] Relevant considerations. While the law concerning ‘subject to finance’ clauses is now settled in Australia, many other cases may occur of a contract being expressed to be subject to some specified event or condition. In each case the question arises whether the parties are not bound (and either may therefore unilaterally withdraw) unless and until that event occurs or condition is fulfilled. Generally, there is a presumption that the parties intend to be bound immediately (as in the ‘subject to finance’ [page 107] cases). This presumption is another example of the operation of good faith in construction, as it means that courts are more likely to hold that the parties must act within the terms of the agreement and only walk away from the contract for a reason that was contemplated at the outset.29 This is to be contrasted with the situation where the parties are not immediately bound and can walk away for any reason whatsoever. However, that presumption may be rebutted. The parties’ intention must be ascertained from their agreement and this is often difficult, as shown by the differing opinions in a number of cases about sales ‘subject to’ survey, running trials or the like.30 The ambiguity of the word ‘condition’31 is another source of difficulty. Courts will also take into consideration the existence of any market or industry practice in this exercise.32 1.
Masters v Cameron (1954) 91 CLR 353 at 360.
2.
[1947] 1 KB 854. See also Lennon v Scarlett & Co (1921) 29 CLR 499; Lamont v Heron (1970) 45 ALJR 102.
3.
Rossiter v Miller (1878) 3 App Cas 1124 at 1143 per Lord Hatherley.
4.
H K Lücke, ‘Arrangements Preliminary to Formal Contracts’ (1967) 3 Adel LR 46.
5.
See Branca v Cobarro [1947] 1 KB 854 at 858, 859; Sinclair Scott & Co Ltd v Naughton (1929) 43 CLR 310 at 317.
6.
(1921) 29 CLR 177. See also Godecke v Kirwan (1973) 129 CLR 629; Meredith v Anthony [1980] 2 NSWLR 784; Bahr v Nicolay (No 2) (1988) 164 CLR 604; 78 ALR 1.
7.
For examples see Allen v Carbone (1975) 132 CLR 528; Eccles v Bryant [1948] 1 Ch 93; Sinclair Scott & Co Ltd v Naughton (1929) 43 CLR 310.
8.
Chillingworth v Esche [1924] 1 Ch 97; Masters v Cameron (1954) 91 CLR 353. For exceptional cases see Filby v Hounsell [1896] 2 Ch 737; Hall v Gilmore [1968] Qd R 406.
9.
Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v G H Dean & Co Pty Ltd [1983] 2 Qd R 204; Elias v George Sahely & Co (Barbados) Ltd [1983] 1 AC 646; Niesmann v Collingridge (1921) 29 CLR 177.
10.
See [12-12].
11.
See, eg Howard Smith & Co Ltd v Varawa (1907) 5 CLR 68; B Seppelt & Sons Ltd v Commissioner for Main Roads (1975) 1 BPR 9147; Hughes v NM Superannuation Pty Ltd (1993) 29 NSWLR 653. See further [12-12].
12.
[2010] 1 WLR 753; [2010] UKSC 14.
13.
John Wakim & Sons Pty Ltd v BBA Industries Pty Ltd [2000] NSW Conv R 55-946.
14.
City of Box Hill v E W Tauschke Pty Ltd [1974] VR 39; Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v G H Dean & Co Pty Ltd [1983] 2 Qd R 204.
15.
Farmer v Honan (1919) 26 CLR 183.
16.
Chillingworth v Esche [1924] 1 Ch 97; Masters v Cameron (1954) 91 CLR 353.
17.
See, eg GR Securities Pty Ltd v Baulkham Hills Private Hospital Pty Ltd (1996) 40 NSWLR 631; Anaconda Nickel Ltd v Tarmoola Australia Pty Ltd (2000) 22 WAR 101.
18.
(1954) 91 CLR 353.
19.
For further discussion see Elisabeth Peden, J W Carter and G J Tolhurst, ‘When Three Just Isn’t Enough: the Fourth Category of the “Subject to Contract” Cases’ (2004) 20 JCL 156; D W McLauchlan, ‘In Defence of the Fourth Category of Preliminary Agreements: Or are there Only Two?’ (2005) 21 JCL 286; Bret Walker, ‘The Fourth Category of Masters v Cameron’ (2009) 25 JCL 108; G J Tolhurst, J W Carter and Elisabeth Peden, ‘Masters v Cameron — Again!’ (2011) 42 VUWLR 49.
20.
See J P Swanton, ‘“Subject to Finance” Clauses in Contracts for the Sale of Land’ (1984) 58 ALJ 633 and 690.
21.
As to forfeiture of deposits see [38-33].
22.
As to the effect of an option see [3-47]-[3-48].
23.
(1982) 149 CLR 571.
24.
(1982) 149 CLR 571.
25.
See also Gold Coast Waterways Authority v Salmead Pty Ltd [1997] 1 Qd R 246 at 358-8.
26.
(1982) 149 CLR 571 at 579.
27.
(1982) 149 CLR 571 at 590. As to illusory consideration see [6-36]-[6-40].
28.
(1982) 149 CLR 571 at 597.
29.
See J W Carter and M P Furmston, ‘Good Faith and Fairness in the Negotiation of Contracts Part 1’ (1994) 8 JCL 1 at 12-15.
30.
See, eg Albion Sugar Co Ltd v William Tankers Ltd (The John S Darbyshire) [1977] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 457; Woodside Offshore Petroleum Pty Ltd v Atwood Oceanics Inc [1986] WAR 253; Gregory v MAB Pty Ltd (1989) 1 WAR 1.
31.
See [13-07].
32.
See Carter, Carter on Contract, §05-020.
[page 108]
Chapter 6
Promises Supported by Consideration [6-01] Why we have a requirement of consideration. At the heart of the law of contract is a thesis that certain promises may be enforced in a court of law.1 The concept of consideration owes its existence to attempts to define those promises which are ‘contractual’ and legally enforceable from that specific perspective. The concept does not determine whether a promise has been made: it determines whether the promise should be recognised as creating an obligation capable of being described as ‘contractual’. Therefore, while some promises are merely gratuitous, for example, a promise to make a gift of money, a contractual promise is made in return for something of value, for example, a promise to pay money may be made in return for a promise to deliver goods. That ‘something of value’ is called consideration. At times the concept is spoken of almost as a living thing, so (metaphorically) contractual promises are ‘supported’ by consideration, and consideration must ‘move’ from the promisee. The consideration put forward may itself be ‘good’ (recognised in law) or ‘bad’ (not recognised). Again, the courts are accustomed to say that consideration must be ‘sufficient’ to justify the enforcement of a promise. Again, some promises are clothed with consideration, whereas others are ‘naked’, that is, not supported by consideration.2
General Issues [6-02] Why consideration? No legal system can countenance the proposition that any and every promise imposes a legal obligation. All systems insist on some indicia that a promise is to give rise to legal, as distinct from purely moral or commercial, enforceability. Some legal systems distinguish between promises which are legally binding and those which are not by reference only to the seriousness of intent which characterises a promise, a test which can be satisfied by a gratuitous
[page 109] promise.3 While the common law insists upon an intention to be bound by a promise,4 it holds that an agreement is not a contract unless consideration is present. It follows from the conception of contract as an institution accepted by society as a means of giving legal effect to promises that some criterion for enforceability must be developed within the law of contract itself. ‘Consideration’ was the criterion adopted in English law and accepted in Australia. In Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd5 Windeyer J observed:6 ‘Whether we like them or not, the rules relating to consideration seem to me a stubborn part of our law. They cannot be displaced by courts by head-on collision’. More than one rationale has been offered for consideration. The promisee under a gratuitous promise has a less compelling claim on the law to enforce the promise than a promisee who ‘bought’ a promise by furnishing consideration for it. Enforcement of gratuitous promises could prejudice those, such as creditors, who have given value to the promisor. The doctrine also protects, deservedly or not, the person who, having made a gratuitous promise rashly, subsequently has regrets. To the modern reader, the rules discussed in this chapter, and the difficulties encountered in applying those rules, not to mention defining the concept itself, raise serious doubts as to the utility of the concept in the modern world. Perhaps this disquiet arises from four misconceptions. First, it is probably misleading to conceive of consideration as a single concept which may be defined succinctly. In fact, the concept seems better understood as a description of a not wholly precise or internally consistent set of rules with a common objective. Second, even though consideration is a criterion of enforceability, it is wrong to regard consideration as the sole criterion. The reality is that promises which are not supported by consideration are frequently enforced, although important questions arise as to whether these promises are enforced as contracts (or under contract law). Third, in the majority of cases consideration does not pose any real difficulties. Many contracts, particularly those of consumers, involve the exchange of goods or services for money and the question of consideration is usually not controversial in these contracts.
Fourth, consideration reflects a feature which is common to both consumer and commercial contracts, namely, that promises are not made ‘in the air’. Rather, they are made in return for something. Moreover, the requirement of consideration does not mean that promises are only binding if the promisee has actually given over some benefit. An important feature of consideration is therefore that a promise may be binding on the promisor before the promisor has received any part of the promisee’s performance. [page 110] [6-03] Form and content of promise. Whether the promise is to do something, for example, to take out an insurance policy in the plaintiff’s name;7 or to forbear from doing something, for example, to refrain from enforcing a judgment for debt or other legal right;8 and whether the promise is expressed in absolute terms or subject to one or more qualifications, the promise is enforceable only if consideration was given for it. Consideration is concerned with the enforceability of promises as promises. A promise without consideration may, when coupled with subsequent events, give rise to rights and duties other than contractual rights and duties. First, the promisor (such as a person who has agreed to provide services) may have embarked upon a performance of the promise and may have performed negligently, causing injury or loss to the promisee. In that case the promisor stands to be liable to the promisee for negligence in tort, though not, in the absence of consideration, in contract.9 Second, one of the alleged weaknesses of consideration under Australian law is that it gives insufficient recognition to the phenomenon of reliance, and denies the contractual significance of a promise which, though not supported by consideration, has been the subject of injurious reliance. However, under the doctrines of estoppel,10 a promisor may be precluded from acting inconsistently with a promise, that is, precluded from enforcing his or her legal rights, even though there was no consideration for the promise. [6-04] Consideration required for legally binding promise. The proposition that consideration is an essential element of a contract is most easily understood if conceived of as being concerned with the essential elements of a legally binding promise or undertaking. A person is bound to perform a promise only if consideration was given for it.11 A few simple illustrations may be given.
(1) Assume an agreement to buy and to sell, what constitutes consideration? The seller provides consideration for the buyer’s promise to pay the price by promising to transfer ownership. Similarly, the buyer’s promise to pay the price constitutes consideration for the seller’s promise to transfer ownership. (2) Assume a partnership agreement between solicitors, what constitutes consideration? The promises of a partner under the agreement are the consideration for the promises by the other partners. (3) Assume that A pays an architect in exchange for a promise to design a house, what is the consideration for the promise? It is no more and no less than the payment to the architect. [page 111]
Historical Development [6-05] Origins.12 In the 16th century the scope of the action of assumpsit was allowed to expand at the expense of the older forms of action, particularly the action of debt sur contract. Moreover, it offered a remedy in situations in which the older forms of writ had not. As assumpsit became at the end of the 16th century and in the first half of the 17th century a general remedy for all breaches of parol promises or undertakings, the doctrine of consideration developed as a requirement of promissory liability. In its earliest usage in the present context the word ‘consideration’ bore the very general connotation of ‘reason for enforceability’. So, assumpsit would lie in respect of a parol promise only if the promise had been supported by a good reason for enforceability. Naturally, there were attempts at more concrete definition. In 1583 in Stone v Wythipol13 Coke argued that ‘every consideration that doth charge the defendant in an assumpsit, must be to the benefit of the defendant or charge of the plaintiff, and no case can be put out of this rule’. This early suggestion that a legally sufficient consideration necessarily involved benefit to the defendant-promisor or detriment to the plaintiff-promisee has had an enduring influence.14 [6-06] Lord Mansfield’s attempts to modify the rule. Although the doctrine that English law enforced only promises supported by ‘consideration’ was accepted in the 17th century and the first half of the 18th century, Lord
Mansfield, who became Chief Justice of the King’s Bench in 1756, did not acquiesce. In Pillans v Van Mierop15 he suggested that consideration was no more than one form of evidence of an intention that a promise was to be legally binding. On this view consideration was essential only where it afforded the only evidence of an intention to contract. Accordingly, and in particular, if a promise was in writing or was evidenced by writing, the writing might serve as an evidentiary substitute for consideration. But in Rann v Hughes16 it was said:17 All contracts are … distinguished into agreements by specialty, and agreements by parol; nor is there any such third class as some of the counsel have endeavoured to maintain, as contracts in writing. If they be merely written and not specialties, they are parol, and a consideration must be proved.
Similarly, it was also decided that compliance with the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp) did not take away the necessity for consideration.18 Lord Mansfield’s second assault on the doctrine which, if it had succeeded, would have effectively emptied the requirement of consideration of any force, was his suggestion that a pre-existing moral [page 112] obligation was a good consideration for a later promise to discharge that obligation. Thus, in Hawkes v Saunders19 he said: Where a man is under a moral obligation, which no Court of Law or Equity can inforce, and promises, the honesty and rectitude of the thing is a consideration … [T]he ties of conscience upon an upright mind are a sufficient consideration.
In the 19th century the courts began to define the concept in a more doctrinal way. Thus, it was said20 that any ‘act of the plaintiff, however, from which the defendant derives a benefit or advantage, or any labour, detriment, or inconvenience sustained by the plaintiff, is a sufficient consideration to support a promise’. Lord Mansfield’s view, though criticised in the meanwhile, was only authoritatively rejected in 1840 in Eastwood v Kenyon.21 The plaintiff (Eastwood) was the executor of the will of one John Sutcliffe. At the time of his death, Sutcliffe had owned some cottages. The person entitled to the cottages after Sutcliffe’s death was his daughter Sarah, who was under 21 years of age and therefore lacked contractual capacity.22 The plaintiff was her guardian. He benefited her in three ways: he paid for her maintenance and education; he paid for improvement of the cottages; and he paid the interest falling due under the
mortgage securing money which he had borrowed to improve the cottages. The plaintiff had also borrowed £140 from one Blackburn and gave him a promissory note for that sum. After Sarah turned 21 she promised the plaintiff to pay the £140 and in fact did pay one year’s interest on that amount to Blackburn. Afterwards Sarah married the defendant who, knowing the above facts, also promised the plaintiff to pay the amount of the promissory note. In giving the judgment of the Queen’s Bench, Lord Denman CJ said that if Lord Mansfield had indeed considered the rule against enforcement of gratuitous promises too narrow and maintained that all promises deliberately made ought to be held binding, this ‘would annihilate the necessity for any consideration at all, in as much as the mere fact of giving a promise creates a moral obligation to perform it’.23 Lord Denman observed:24 The enforcement of such promises by law, however plausibly reconciled by the desire to effect all conscientious engagements, might be attended with mischievous consequences to society; one of which would be the frequent preference of voluntary undertakings to claims for just debts. Suits would thereby be multiplied, and voluntary undertakings would also be multiplied,
[page 113] to the prejudice of real creditors. The temptations of executors would be much increased by the prevalence of such a doctrine, and the faithful discharge of their duty be rendered more difficult.
Describing the consideration propounded in the instant case as ‘past’ consideration and not requested by either the defendant or by his wife before their marriage, the court distinguished the case from those in which the promisor had previously requested the expenditure in question and subsequently promised to pay the amount expended.25
Definition [6-07] Introduction. When the existence or validity of a propounded consideration is in question, what was in fact the agreement of the parties must first be determined. It is only necessary to determine its effectiveness as consideration if what the plaintiff propounds as consideration did indeed form part of the parties’ bargain.26 Conversely, a promise is not rendered binding by the fact that there was at hand some ‘price’ which would have served as a good consideration, if in fact this was not the agreed price as indicated by the parties’ agreement. Having identified the agreement between the parties, we need a
definition of consideration, to be applied to determine whether, as a matter of law, consideration is present. All definitions of the concept import the notion of a consideration for one party’s promise, or bundle of promises. Consideration may be and often is itself a promise (or a bundle of promises), but it is always for the other party’s undertaking (or undertakings) and it is not strictly accurate to speak of consideration for a contract.27 The basic contrast in the definitions discussed below is between a focus on an element of bargain and analysis in terms of benefit and detriment. [6-08] Definition in terms of benefit and detriment. In Currie v Misa28 it was suggested: A valuable consideration, in the sense of the law, may consist either in some right, interest, profit, or benefit accruing to the one party, or some forbearance, detriment, loss or responsibility given, suffered or undertaken by the other …
This definition has the appeal of simplicity, but it suffers from the defect that it does not require consideration to be causally connected with the promise which it is propounded to support. A person may suffer a detriment, or confer a benefit, without being asked to do so. Such a person does not make a bargain, although there may be a hope, or expectation, that something will be received from the person on whom the benefit was conferred, or that someone will reverse the detriment. So there is at least a [page 114] need to imply, or infer, an element of cause and effect between the promise and the benefit or detriment (consideration).29 It is clear that direct benefit to the promisor is not essential: the promisor may have stipulated for the promisee’s benefiting a third party. For example, in the case of a guarantee, the consideration for the promise of the guarantor (promisor) is the advancing of money or credit by the creditor (promisee) to the principal debtor (third party). It follows that detriment incurred by a promisee is a valid consideration whether or not it involves benefit to the promisor. The fact that it usually does benefit the promisor may be seen as merely explaining why the promisor wanted the promisee to incur the particular detriment. Can consideration be adequately defined simply in terms of detriment to the
promisee? It is certainly not required that the promisee should have been ‘actually worse off’ as a result of furnishing consideration. If A promises to pay B money in consideration of B’s refraining from drinking, using tobacco, swearing and playing cards or billiards for money until B becomes 21 years of age, B’s refraining may be good consideration although it may in fact have benefited B (and not A).30 On the other hand, Professor Williston, in reference to unilateral contracts31 described32 ‘as accurate as a brief general statement can be’ the statement that the: … requirement ordinarily stated for the sufficiency for consideration (sometimes stated as the ‘reality’ of consideration) to support a promise is, in substance, a detriment incurred by the promisee or a benefit received by the promisor at the request of the promisor.
The introduction of an element of request is an improvement on the Currie v Misa definition, but Williston recognised that his ‘definition’ required some modification in its application to bilateral contracts. The reason for this is that, as was illustrated earlier,33 a promise still to be performed (‘executory promise’) is a recognised form of consideration even though it is extremely difficult to see how the mere making of a promise is detrimental or the conferral of a benefit. [6-09] Definition in terms of bargain. Sir Frederick Pollock put forward34 the following definition: ‘An act or forbearance of the one party, or the promise thereof is the price for which the promise is bought’. Its elegance, and approval by the House of Lords in Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v Selfridge & Co Ltd,35 assured this definition of a very prominent place in the modern law of contract. Professor Corbin refrained from attempting a dogmatic definition of consideration, preferring to beg the question by saying36 that consideration [page 115] is ‘one of those factors that have been held, more or less generally, to be sufficient to make a promise enforceable’. On the other hand, the Restatement (2d) Contracts (1979), §71 includes a very elaborate definition emphasising a necessary element of bargain. It states: (1) To constitute consideration, a performance or a return promise must be bargained for. (2) A performance or return promise is bargained for if it is sought by the promisor in exchange for his promise and is given by the promisee in exchange for that promise. (3) The performance may consist of (a) an act other than a promise, or
(b) a forbearance, or (c) the creation, modification, or destruction of a legal relation. (4) The performance or return promise may be given to the promisor or to some other person…37
[6-10] Consideration as the ‘reason’ for enforcement. Criticisms of a definition of consideration as the ‘price’ of a promise apply à fortiori to a ‘definition’ of consideration suggested by Professor Atiyah38 as ‘a reason for enforcement’ of a promise. The vagueness of this concept scarcely needs to be pointed out. Professor Treitel observes39 in his critique of Atiyah’s analysis: ‘to say that consideration is a reason for enforcing a promise, and that courts will enforce promises when the justice of the case requires it points to a difficulty, but it does not solve any problems’. To describe consideration as a reason for enforcement acknowledges the purpose of and difficulties with the doctrine of consideration but offers nothing in its place. [6-11] Conclusion. Australian courts have embraced the bargain theory of consideration,40 although not as strongly as the American courts.41 Today, consideration may be defined as some act or forbearance involving legal detriment to the promisee, or the promise of such an act or forbearance, furnished by the promisee as the agreed price of the promise. This definition directs attention to two aspects of consideration: (1) it must have been agreed upon as the price of a promise; and (2) some prices agreed upon will not serve as valid consideration. The generality of the definition safeguards it from the kinds of criticism which can be made of the more explicit benefit-detriment approach. The latter attempts, albeit unsuccessfully, to specify those characteristics which an act or forbearance must possess if it is to be a good consideration. ‘Price’ [page 116] correctly insists that the parties’ agreement on the particular act or forbearance as the consideration for the promise is essential, but says nothing as to the qualities which a particular act or forbearance must possess in order to be accepted by the courts as a valid consideration. There is still the problem of how promises exchanged under an executory
contract can be consideration for one another. It is the presence or absence of consideration as at the time of the making of the agreement that is in issue. An executory contract therefore raises the question, how does a promise made by A support a reciprocal promise by B, where A has done nothing at that time beyond furnishing a promise in return for B’s promise? It cannot be answered that it is because B’s promise is legally binding on B, since whether this is so will depend on whether A’s promise is good consideration for B’s. The only alternative to this circle is to recognise that certain promises have an institutional backing — the law of contract — and are binding because of each promisor’s assumption of contractual (as distinct from, for example, moral) responsibility to the other for the promise.42
Consideration Not Required for Deeds [6-12] Simple contracts and specialties. According to the common law, consideration is an essential element of a ‘simple’, ‘parol’ or ‘informal’ contract. This chapter is concerned with simple contracts, not with formal ones, and references in this chapter to ‘contracts’ must be understood as limited in this way. Consideration is not required for formal promises under seal. These are a form of ‘specialty’ or ‘deed’ and are enforceable as such. Promises under seal are called ‘covenants’ and are enforceable although consideration was not given for them. The deed may be a bilateral (or multilateral) instrument between two (or more) parties. Alternatively, it may be a unilateral covenant (‘deed poll’) made by one or more persons to other persons who, although identified in the instrument, do not join in its execution. The solemnity of ‘form’ may be seen as a justification for enforcement of a promise which the law accepts as an alternative to consideration. Formal contracts may be conceived of as documents which are sealed and delivered and intended to take effect as deeds. Legislation impinges on the general law requirements.43 For example, s 38 of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) requires that every deed be signed as well as sealed and be attested by at least one witness not a party to the deed; provides for what is a ‘sufficient’ signing; and provides that ‘every instrument expressed to be an indenture or deed, or to be sealed which is signed and attested in accordance with this section, shall be deemed to be sealed’. That section
[page 117] does not affect the execution of deeds by corporations but s 51A of the same Act contains special provisions in that respect.44 Notwithstanding that there may be no consideration for a promise made by deed, the promise is enforceable in the same way as a contractual promise, in the sense that contract damages may be obtained for breach of the promise. However, if there is no consideration for the promise, it remains a ‘gratuitous’ promise and because equity does not assist a volunteer may not be amenable to relief by way of specific performance.45 On the other hand, a document may be executed and take effect as a deed and yet also satisfy the legal requirements for a binding contract. In particular, the promises made in the deed may be supported by consideration so that all remedies are (potentially) available. A document may be executed under seal yet operate only as an informal agreement (and as such have to satisfy the requirement of consideration) because it was not intended to take effect as a deed.46 This possibility is more likely to suggest itself where the party in question is a body corporate than in other cases.
Executory and Executed Consideration [6-13] Promise as consideration. Many contracts involve a bundle of promises (rather than a single promise) on the part of each party to be performed at different times. The promises, or some of them, furnished by the contracting parties may fall due for performance concurrently. On the other hand, there may be no concurrence of performance between the promises or between any two of the promises of the respective parties. Some promises may be due for performance almost immediately after the making of the contract and others much later. But importantly, each party’s promises represent the consideration for those of the other. In these situations the promise of a party becomes binding at the time it was made,47 rather than when the other party performs the promises. The fact that the promise has not fallen due for performance signifies that the consideration is executory in nature, and the contracts are described as bilateral because the agreement is formed by an exchange of mutual or reciprocal promises. Common examples are contracts of employment, contracts for the sale of land and contracts for the sale of goods in the commercial context, where payment and
delivery are usually postponed. [6-14] Act or forbearance as consideration. Where the proper view is that a person has bargained for an act or forbearance itself as the consideration for a promise, the promisor signifies assent to be bound by the promise by the doing of the act or the giving of the forbearance, and not before.48 Assume that the owner of a lost dog promises a reward for its [page 118] return. No one is contractually bound to search for the animal, but if a finder returns the dog in acceptance of the offer, the owner may be contractually bound to pay the reward.49 At its inception, the contract so made is executory on one side (the owner’s) only, the consideration on the other side (the finder’s) being executed at that time. From this perspective the contract is ‘unilateral’, there being only one executory promise. The word ‘executed’ is somewhat ambiguous. In the present context it means that all that is required to entitle a promisee to call for performance by the promisor is the doing of the act. Rather than making a promise, the promisee provides consideration for the promise by action or forbearance, as requested.50
Referability of Consideration [6-15] Motive and consideration. It is usually said that motive and consideration are not the same thing.51 But such statements must be treated with caution. After all, consideration for a promise is the very thing that will motivate the making of a promise and the provision of consideration.52 But it is nevertheless true that a good motive for making a promise does not amount to consideration for the promise. Generally, each party to a contract enters into it in the hope and expectation of deriving some benefit from it. So, A, when entering into a contract, may hope and expect that a profit will be derived by reason of B’s participation. Yet the obtaining of that profit, while it may be A’s motive, is not the consideration for A’s promise. The discussion of motive is one way of introducing the idea that consideration must be referable to the promise which is sought to be enforced. It is no consideration ‘to refrain from a course of conduct which it was never intended to
pursue’.53 There must be some connection between a promise which is sought to be enforced and the consideration which is alleged to support the promise. Although it is not necessary that a propounded consideration should have been the only inducement for a promise, it is necessary that it was an inducement.54 The converse is true also: once it appears that a requested act or forbearance follows a request, inducement may be presumed. Therefore, the onus of establishing the contrary is on the promisor.55 [page 119] The issue of referability is most frequently raised in the context of unilateral contracts, and attempts to distinguish contractual promises from conditional gift promises. [6-16] Conditional gift promises and contracts. A promise in the form ‘I will do act A if and when event B occurs’ appears to be a gratuitous promise, the performance of which is contingent on the occurrence of the event. A clear example is a promise by X to pay Y $100 if X has this amount in his or her pocket on returning from a shopping trip. A promise in the form ‘I will do act A if and when event B occurs’ is not converted into a contract merely by reason of the fact that the person to whom the promise is made has the capacity to bring about event B. Thus, if Y accompanies X on the shopping trip, the mere fact that Y is in a position to pay for X’s purchases does not give X’s statement contractual force. Although it is necessarily assumed that Y did not provide consideration by promising that event B would occur, the absence of such a promise is not of itself a reason for denying that the promise is enforceable as a contract by the promisee. Cases such as Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co56 illustrate quite clearly that a promisee may provide consideration by doing an act which was not promised. The act must be requested by the promisor. So, for example, ‘I will pay $20 to any person who returns my lost dog to me’, is a promise which may be found to be supported by consideration if it amounts to a request to look for the dog. Equally, however, the presence of a request is not conclusive. For example, common sense tells us that it is not a contract if X promises Y that Y may have X’s television set if Y turns it on. Intuitively, we know that the act of turning on the television set is not consideration for the promisor’s promise, even though requested by the promisor. The promise is still no more than a promise to make a
gift. The difficulty lies in explaining this intuition by reference to consideration itself. The actual words used may be important. A promise in the form ‘I will give $20 to the first member of the class who raises his or her hand’ will be construed as a conditional promise of a gift, whereas one in the form, ‘I will pay $20 to the first person who removes a load of rubbish from my house’ is more likely to be interpreted as a promise made in consideration of an act. But the use of the word ‘give’ is by no means conclusive because the definitions discussed above57 insist that the answer in all cases be found in the element of bargain. The question in each case is whether the event stipulated for is the ‘price’ of the promise or merely a condition precedent on fulfilment of which the promise, still gratuitous (and therefore not enforceable as a contract), was to operate. [6-17] Absence of obvious benefit or detriment. The rule that although consideration must be sufficient it need not be adequate58 means that equivalence of benefit and detriment in the act and performance of the promise is not required. The fact that a promisor has made a bad bargain is [page 120] not a ground for saying that consideration was absent from the promisor’s promise. Nevertheless, in the nature of things, the question ‘contract or gift promise’ will arise where the event is not of obvious benefit to the promisor or detriment to the promisee. De La Bere v Pearson59 was an action against a newspaper proprietor for damages for breach of a contract to use due care in the giving of financial advice. The newspaper invited readers to address requests for financial advice to its city editor. The requests and replies were, if the defendant so chose, to be published in the newspaper and such publication might have a tendency to increase sales. The plaintiff sought advice on investment and asked for the name of a ‘good’ stockbroker. The city editor handed the plaintiff’s letter to an outside broker and the plaintiff sent him money for investment. The broker sent the plaintiff contract notes but did not purchase the securities. He was not a member of the Stock Exchange and was, in fact, an undischarged bankrupt. The city editor could, if he had made inquiries, have discovered these facts. The English Court of Appeal held that there was consideration for an implied undertaking to take reasonable care, in the fact that by sending his letter inquiring on the basis
that it might be published if the defendant so chose, the plaintiff had conferred a benefit on the defendant. Implicit in this holding is the view that the permission to publish was the bargained-for consideration for the defendant’s implied promise of due care, not merely a part of a condition to be fulfilled by the plaintiff in order to get gratuitous advice.60 [6-18] The Woollen Mills case. In Australian Woollen Mills Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth61 the plaintiff, a manufacturer of worsted cloth, purchased large quantities of raw wool between 1939 and the end of 1948. It claimed from the Commonwealth a sum of £108,871, said to be due under a series of alleged contracts by virtue of which the Commonwealth was alleged to have promised to pay a subsidy. The history surrounding the case begins during the Second World War when the British government purchased the Australian wool clip with the exception of wool required for local manufacture. A local manufacturer, such as the plaintiff, which required wool was forced to purchase from the Australian government rather than from growers. Growers received a subsidy and local manufacturers benefited from lower prices. A return to normal wool sale practices — auction sales to local and overseas manufacturers — was to take place in 1947. Market forces would almost certainly push prices up to the disadvantage of local manufacturers such as the plaintiff. So the Commonwealth devised a subsidy plan the aim of which was to maintain the price of wool purchased by Australian manufacturers for domestic use. In June and August 1946 the Prices Commissioner announced that the amount of the subsidy was to be calculated by reference to the difference between the current basic price of wool for domestic production and the average market price for each [page 121] auction series. The amount was to be determined by the Australian Wool Realisation Commission. Subsequently, the subsidy scheme was discontinued. The plaintiff alleged a promise by the Commonwealth that, in consideration that the plaintiff would purchase wool for domestic consumption, the Commonwealth would pay a subsidy. It was alleged that the plaintiff made purchases of wool ‘in pursuance of the said agreement’. The High Court said:62 In cases of this class it is necessary, in order that a contract may be established, that it should be made to appear that the statement or announcement which is relied on as a promise was really offered as
consideration for the doing of the act, and that the act was really done in consideration of a potential promise inherent in the statement or announcement. Between the statement or announcement, which is put forward as an offer capable of acceptance by the doing of an act, and the act which is put forward as the executed consideration for the alleged promise, there must subsist, so to speak, the relation of a quid pro quo. One simple example will suffice to illustrate this. A, in Sydney, says to B in Melbourne: ‘I will pay you £1000 on your arrival in Sydney’. The next day B goes to Sydney. If these facts alone are proved, it is perfectly clear that no contract binding A to pay £1000 to B is established. For all that appears there may be no relation whatever between A’s statement and B’s act. It is quite consistent with the facts proved that B intended to go to Sydney anyhow, and that A is merely announcing that, if and when B arrives in Sydney, he will make a gift to him. The necessary relation is not shown to exist between the announcement and the act. Proof of further facts, however, might suffice to establish a contract. For example, it might be proved that A, on the day before the £1000 was mentioned, had told B that it was a matter of vital importance to him (A) that B should come to Sydney forthwith, and that B objected that to go to Sydney at the moment might involve him in financial loss. These further facts throw a different light on the statement on which B relies as an offer accepted by his going to Sydney. They are not necessarily conclusive but it is now possible to infer (a) that the statement that £1000 would be paid to B on arrival in Sydney was intended as an offer of a promise, (b) that the promise was offered as the consideration for the doing of an act by B, and (c) that the doing of the act was at once the acceptance of an offer and the providing of an executed consideration for a promise. The necessary connection or relation between the announcement and the act is provided if the inference is drawn that A has requested B to go to Sydney.
Turning to the facts before the court it was said63 to be ‘impossible to find anywhere anything in the nature of a request or invitation to purchase wool’. Nor was there anything to suggest ‘that the payment of subsidy was put forward in order to induce any manufacturer to purchase wool’. And there was no evidence ‘that the payment of subsidy and the purchase of wool were regarded as related in such a way that the one was a consideration for the other’. Applying the statement quoted above, the High Court held:64 If we ask (what we think is the real and ultimate question) whether there is a promise offered in consideration of the doing of an act, as a price which is to
[page 122] be paid for the doing of an act, we cannot find such a promise. No relation of quid pro quo between a promise and an act can be inferred.
An appeal to the Privy Council was dismissed.65
Consideration Must Move from the Promisee
[6-19] The rule. By the mid-19th century,66 if not earlier,67 it was established that consideration must move from the promisee.68 The ‘promisee’ is the person to whom a contractual promise is made, as where a seller (promisor) promises a buyer (the promisee) to deliver goods on a certain date. Because the contract is bilateral, the buyer is also a promisor. Accordingly, it is not enough that a promise was made to the person seeking to enforce it; it is also required that that person (and not some third party) should have given consideration for the promise. Thus, in the sale example, the seller’s promise to deliver is binding because it is supported by consideration moving from the promisee-buyer. [6-20] Relation with privity of contract rule. It might be thought that the requirements that a person seeking to enforce an agreement should have been a party to the ‘promise’ (the privity rule) and a party to the ‘bargain’ (the consideration rule) are in truth one and the same. However, the cases69 support the view that privity and the requirement that consideration move from the promisee are two related but distinct rules. Thus, a person (promisee) to whom a promise has been made may not have furnished consideration, and since a person (third party) may have furnished consideration for a promise yet not be the person to whom that promise was made, the two requirements are doctrinally distinct. [6-21] Consideration need not move to the promisor. As has already been illustrated,70 there is no rule that the promisor must receive the benefit of the consideration provided by a promisee.71 Of course, in most cases the promisee will have provided consideration for the promisor’s benefit. But when the rule of consideration requires that a party seeking to enforce a promise provide consideration it does not also require that the promisor be the person who received the consideration. So, A might make a promise to deliver goods to B in return for a promise by B to pay the price to C. The promise to deliver is made to B who, as promisee must, in order to obtain a legally enforceable promise, provide [page 123] consideration. The consideration is the promise, made by B (to A), to pay C. [6-22] Joint promisees. In Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd72 C
granted to the O company, in consideration of £5, a right to quarry and remove stone from his land and a right of way. The O company also promised to pay royalties. The agreement contained a statement by C in these terms: I authorise the above company to pay all money connected with this agreement to my wife, Doris Sophia Coulls and myself, Arthur Leopold Coulls as joint tenants (or tenants-in-common?) (the one which goes to living partner).
The agreement was signed by C and his wife and by a representative of the O company. C was survived by his wife. A majority of the High Court construed the quoted paragraph as a revocable mandate from C which was revoked by his death. For the majority, the contract was one between C (alone) and the O company, and no promise was made to C’s wife. Therefore, Mrs C, not being privy to the promise, could not enforce it. Barwick CJ and Windeyer J dissented. They construed the contract as including a promise to pay C and Mrs C, which was not revoked on C’s death. Moreover, in the view of Barwick CJ and Windeyer J, Mrs C was a party to the contract, so that the contract was between O on the one hand and C and Mrs C on the other. A term of that contract was a promise by O to pay C and Mrs C jointly. On this approach, because C and Mrs C were joint promisees, the doctrine of privity of contract presented no obstacle to enforcement by Mrs C. But did it matter that she had not herself furnished consideration? Barwick CJ and Windeyer J thought not.73 Taylor and Owen JJ agreed in rejecting the contention that if one only of two joint promisees provides the consideration for the promise the other cannot enforce the promise.74 Windeyer J summarised the position in these terms:75 Still, it was said, no consideration moved from her. But that, I consider, mistakes the nature of a contract made with two or more persons jointly. The promise is made to them collectively. It must, of course, be supported by consideration, but that does not mean by consideration furnished by them separately. It means a consideration given on behalf of them all, and therefore moving from all of them. In such a case the promise of the promisor is not gratuitous; and, as between him and the joint promisees, it matters not how they were able to provide the price of his promise to them.
Thus, the requirement that consideration must move from the promisee is satisfied if consideration moves from one or some of two or more joint promisees. A fortiori it is satisfied where the plaintiff furnishes part of the consideration, the rest being furnished by the co-joint promisees.76 [page 124]
The Sufficiency Rule General [6-23] The rule. The rule that consideration must be sufficient requires that what is put forward as consideration reach a threshold of legal recognition. But once this threshold is reached no inquiry is required into how valuable the consideration is. Thus, the rule is frequently expressed in the form ‘consideration must be sufficient but need not be adequate’.77 Sufficient consideration is often described as ‘good’ or ‘valuable’ consideration. The sufficiency rule therefore prompts the question: what does the law recognise as valuable? The simple answer is that anything which is not unlawful may count as consideration ‘in the eye of the law’.78 Where a promise is put forward as consideration it must be one which a court, if called upon to do so, would enforce. The rule requiring sufficiency of consideration applies both to consideration in the form of an executory promise and executed consideration in the form of an act. Indeed, when determining whether a promise is consideration, the promisee will not be permitted to say that the promise was consideration if the performance of the promise would not be ‘valuable’ as understood in this context. Many of the ‘rules’ of consideration involve the application of a rule that consideration must be sufficient. These are treated under separate headings. [6-24] Consideration must be legal. Since the law cannot contemplate as valuable something which is illegal, there is a general requirement that the consideration put forward to support a promise must, at least, be lawful. A promise the performance of which would necessarily be illegal is no consideration. For example, a contract killer could hardly put forward the promise to kill as a legally valid consideration. The same result obtains, although for less compelling reasons, where the promise is merely unenforceable on public policy grounds. Wyatt v Kreglinger79 illustrates this. The employers, by letter, promised a wool broker employed by them that on his retirement they would pay him a ‘pension’ or ‘remuneration’ of £200 per year provided he did not enter the wool trade and did ‘nothing at any time to [their] detriment (fair business competition excepted)’. Two interpretations of the letter were possible: first, that it was a promise of payment
subject to fulfilment of certain contingencies; and, second, that it was a promise of payment in consideration of promises by the employee not to enter the wool trade and not to injure the employers in their business. On the basis that the latter view was correct, the court considered the employers’ promise not [page 125] enforceable because the employee’s promises were unenforceable as in unreasonable restraint of trade.80 If illegality enters the picture only by reason of the manner of performance which the plaintiff has chosen, the contract (being capable of being performed legally) is valid, but public policy may prevent the plaintiff from enforcing it.81
Adequacy [6-25] Consideration need not be ‘adequate’. It is well established that the ‘inadequacy’ of consideration is no ground of objection.82 ‘Adequacy’ denotes ‘adequacy in value’, by comparison with the (objective) value of the promise which it supports. On the other hand, ‘sufficiency’ of consideration describes ‘legally sufficient’ consideration, that is, as a synonym for its ‘validity’ or ‘effectiveness’. A propounded consideration which satisfies all those tests which it must satisfy in order to make a promise legally binding is ‘sufficient’, and it does not matter that its value is not ‘adequate’ in comparison with the value of the promise. For example, if Janice decides to sell her motor car to Fred for $1000, her promise to sell is sufficient consideration for Fred’s promise to purchase even though the vehicle has a market value of $500. The consideration provided by Janice is sufficient even though, objectively, it looks inadequate because the car is worth only $500. [6-26] Situations where adequacy is relevant. Although the law governing the formation of contracts is not concerned with the adequacy of consideration, and inadequacy as such does not negate the validity of consideration, it may be relevant to issues of economic duress,83 undue influence84 and unconscionability,85 as well as the availability of the remedy of specific performance.86
[6-27] Nominal consideration. It clearly follows from the lack of concern with adequacy that a purely nominal consideration will suffice to make a promise binding. Payment of ten dollars (or a promise to pay that amount) is often used in commercial contracts to support quite onerous promises. The parties to such agreements are simply invoking a device which the law allows in order to render binding a promise which may be gratuitous. They could equally use another device which the law allows to achieve that purpose, namely, the formality of a deed or specialty. [page 126] In Thomas v Thomas87 John Thomas said (the evening before he died) that he wanted his widow to have his house and its contents or £100 instead. A few days later the executors of John’s will agreed in writing with the widow that in consideration of their desire to carry out John’s wishes and also the widow’s undertaking to pay £1 per year towards the ground rent and to keep the house in repair, they would transfer the house to her for life upon her request. It was held that the widow’s agreement to pay £1 per annum and to keep the premises in repair was a good consideration for the promise to convey. An argument that on the proper construction of the agreement the widow’s promise was a mere proviso or condition attached to a promise of a gift by the executors was rejected. Whether the promisor actually places a value on what represents a nominal consideration is also irrelevant. Thus, in Chappell & Co Ltd v Nestlé Co Ltd88 Chappell owned the copyright in a popular tune, ‘Rockin Shoes’, and Nestlé manufactured chocolates. Nestlé offered the public ‘records’ of the tune (actually thin films of cellulose acetate mounted on cardboard) in return for payment of 1s 6d and provision of the wrappers from three bars of their chocolate. Under copyright legislation it was permissible for Nestlé to use the copyright provided the copyright owner was paid a certain percentage of the ‘ordinary retail selling price’ of the record. Chappell argued that this contemplated a selling price consisting of money alone, with the result that the section did not permit Nestlé to do what it had done. Nestlé argued that the selling price in the instant case did consist of money alone, namely 1s 6d, the supply of the three wrappers being merely a qualifying condition to be satisfied by persons wishing to buy the records. The House of Lords, by a three to two majority, rejected this contention, holding that since Nestlé’s purpose was to increase sales of its chocolate, the
supply of the three wrappers, constituting evidence of such sales, formed part of the consideration.
Past Consideration The General Rule [6-28] Past consideration no consideration. In Roscorla v Thomas89 the plaintiff’s pleadings alleged that ‘in consideration that the plaintiff, at the request of the defendant, had bought of the defendant a certain horse, at and for a certain price, the defendant promised the plaintiff that the said horse was sound and free from vice’. They went on to complain that the horse was not sound and free from vice. What consideration had the plaintiff, on this pleading, furnished for the promise (‘warranty’)? Certainly not the buying of the horse since that transaction preceded the giving of the warranty: that was held to be a ‘past’ consideration, or more accurately, no [page 127] consideration. It was also held that a warranty as to soundness and freedom from vice was not an implied term of the contract of sale itself, the consideration for which would have been the plaintiff’s promise to accept the goods and pay their price.90 There being no consideration for the warranty, the plaintiff failed. Assume that A, being already indebted to B, promises to pay on a future date. The only consideration for A’s promise, the antecedent debt, is a ‘past consideration’ which is no consideration.91 However, in some such cases it may be legitimate to infer that there was a promise to forbear from enforcing the original legal liability. If this is so, and was the agreed consideration for the promise, the promise is binding.92
Executed Consideration [6-29] The concept. Executed consideration and past consideration are distinct. In the case of executed consideration the act or forbearance supplied is a part of
the same transaction as the promise sought to be enforced. In the case of past consideration, the promise is made after an independently constituted and concluded transaction. That transaction may explain the promisor’s motive of gratitude or sense of moral obligation in giving the subsequent promise, but this is legally irrelevant. For example, if A finds and returns B’s goods and B then promises A a reward, the return of the goods is a past consideration for B’s promise. But if B had advertised a reward for the return of the goods and A had returned the goods relying on the advertisement, A would have furnished an executed consideration. The classic example of an executed consideration is Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co.93 [6-30] Request for performance.In Lampleigh v Brathwait94 Brathwait, having committed murder, asked Lampleigh to use his best efforts to procure a pardon from the King. Lampleigh was active and incurred expense to this end, and later Brathwait promised to pay him £100. He did not pay. In Lampleigh’s action in assumpsit, Brathwait argued that his promise to pay had been gratuitous, the only consideration to be found being past. But the court rejected this argument. The reasoning of the court95 suggests that what is crucial is the fact that the promisee did not spontaneously provide the services but did so in response to the promisor’s request. The court seems to have treated request, response and promise of payment as all part of the same transaction, rather than treating the first two as a closed transaction followed by the promise of payment. A promise given at the request of the defendant prior to the rendering of services, and on the understanding that the promisor is to be ‘paid’, will [page 128] support a subsequent promise by the requesting party to pay for the services rendered.96 [6-31] Implied promise to pay for services rendered. Lampleigh v Brathwait97 was decided in 1615, some two centuries before the clear rejection of moral obligation as a good consideration.98 Two rationalisations have emerged in modern times of a promisor’s liability on a promise to pay an amount for services which were earlier requested.99 One is that the request followed by the meeting of it creates an implied contract to pay a reasonable amount. The
subsequent promise to pay a stipulated amount then serves as evidence against the promisor of what is a reasonable amount.100 According to this explanation, the consideration for the promise is the actual supply of the services. The other rationalisation is that the original request and response constitute an agreement to pay a reasonable amount and that the actual agreeing on an amount simply fixes that amount. Under this approach there is a (later) contract the consideration for which is found in the settlement of the quantum of liability. In Re Casey’s Patents; Stewart v Casey101 owners of patent rights agreed to give their manager a one-third share in the patents in consideration of his services in working the patents. It was argued that, on its true construction, the agreement was one to reward for past services only. Both of the analyses summarised above are present in the following passage from the judgment of Bowen LJ:102 Now, the fact of a past service raises an implication that at the time it was rendered it was to be paid for, and, if it was a service which was to be paid for, when you get in the subsequent document a promise to pay, that promise may be treated either as an admission which evidences or as a positive bargain which fixes the amount of that reasonable remuneration on the faith of which the service was originally rendered. So that here for past services there is ample justification for the promise to give the third share.
Where it is impossible to apply either analysis, but it is clear that the services have not been rendered gratuitously, the recipient of the benefit of the services may come under an obligation to make restitution.103 [6-32] Accord and satisfaction. Another analysis of fact situations where a promise is made in consideration of the performance of a contract is that the promise forms part of an accord and satisfaction under which the parties agree on the amount specified in substitution for their rights and duties under the already existing contract.104 On this view, the [page 129] consideration for the promise is the promisee’s releasing or agreeing to release rights under a prior contract.105
Exceptions [6-33] Bills of exchange. In order that a holder of a bill of exchange should
enjoy the special rights and protection available to a ‘holder for value’, it is necessary that the holder should have given valuable consideration for it. Section 32(1) of the Bills of Exchange Act 1909 (Cth)106 provides that ‘valuable consideration for a bill may be constituted by (a) any consideration sufficient to support a simple contract; or (b) an antecedent debt or liability’. Paragraph (b) signifies a ‘past consideration’ which is for this purpose as effective as sufficient consideration. The antecedent debt or liability must, in general, be that of the promisor or drawer of the bill rather than that of a third party.107 At least where the antecedent debt or liability is that of a third party, there must be some relationship between the receipt of the bill and the third party’s antecedent debt or liability. For example, the promisor or drawer may have obtained the recipient’s forbearance or promise to forbear from suing the third party. Even where an antecedent debt or liability exists, a ‘consideration sufficient to support a simple contract’ would exist if the bill was truly given in return for a promise to forbear from enforcing that debt or liability. Where there has been a contract for the supply of goods or services for a price and the price has not been paid but a cheque has been given for the amount of the price and not honoured on presentation, the supplier is usually entitled to sue either on the original contract or on the cheque.108 The supplier will usually sue on the cheque because defences relating to the goods or services are only available to an action on the dishonoured cheque if they establish a total failure of the consideration109 for which the cheque was given. The defences are available to an action for the contract price even if there was no total failure of consideration.110 [6-34] Acknowledgment of debt. In the case of a debt, recovery of which would otherwise be barred by the relevant statute of limitations, an acknowledgment of the debt (including an acknowledgment by part payment) by the debtor ‘revived’ the cause of action so that the limitation period commenced to run as from the time of the acknowledgment. This rule, developed by the courts, was said to be sustained by the view that the acknowledgment imported a promise to pay the debt. Such an implied promise, being given without consideration, could not itself be sued upon as a contract. It is, of course, difficult to see what justification could be offered for having a limitation period, in respect of a cause of action which [page 130]
had accrued perhaps years previously, run from the time of that later promise. However, any need to resolve this difficulty is now obviated by legislative provisions which dispense with the requirement of consideration or provide that the cause of action is deemed to have accrued on and not before the date of the acknowledgment or last payment.111 [6-35] Ratification by minor. At common law, voidable contracts of a minor could be rendered binding by being ratified by the minor once the minor attained majority.112 Thus, by virtue of a gratuitous unilateral act, a person may become liable on a promise on which he or she had not been liable previously, either during infancy or after majority and before ratification.113
Illusory Consideration [6-36] The concept. Sometimes it is said that a propounded consideration is no consideration because it is ‘illusory’. The characterisation of a consideration as ‘illusory’ obscures rather than clarifies, and the word has been used to refer to conceptually different things. Thus, a promise which is no more than a promise to perform a contractual duty already owed to the other party114 and a promise to do something which the law declares to be illegal115 could be called illusory considerations. Other illustrations might be promises agreed to be binding in honour only and not at law,116 or promises accompanied by an exclusion of all liability for any breach.117 If the expression, ‘illusory consideration’ has any utility it is in describing a promise, performance of which would be at the sole discretion of the promisor. Because of the reservation of discretion, the promise cannot be regarded as a sufficient consideration for another promise.118 It is also, perhaps, useful in describing promises which are unenforceable on the basis of uncertainty.119 [6-37] Relevance mainly to executory consideration. It is executory rather than executed considerations which are usually described as ‘illusory’. The promise will have been formulated in language by the parties and will need to be so formulated by the plaintiff in his or her pleadings. Analysis of the parties’ language or the attempt to plead the consideration may reveal a ‘vague’ promise. Just as the defendant’s promise must be [page 131]
sufficiently certain in meaning to be enforceable120 so must the plaintiff’s own promise which is put forward as consideration.121 [6-38] Discretionary promises. In Placer Development Ltd v The Commonwealth122 there was a written agreement between the Commonwealth and the plaintiff company (Placer) which contemplated that Placer would form a company (the Timber Company) to produce plywood and other timber products in what was then the Territory of Papua and New Guinea. It contained the following clause: If customs duty is paid upon the importation into Australia of the plywood, veneers, logs and other products of the Timber Company, and is not remitted, the Commonwealth will pay to the Timber Company a subsidy upon the exportation of these products from the Territory for entry into Australia of an amount or at a rate determined by the Commonwealth from time to time, but the amount of subsidy paid shall not exceed the amount of customs duty paid and not remitted …
The High Court held by a three to two majority that the agreement did not oblige the Commonwealth to determine an amount or rate of subsidy, to pay a subsidy of an amount or rate sufficient to recoup the customs duty paid and not remitted, or, indeed, to pay any subsidy at all. Kitto J, who delivered one of the majority judgments, said:123 [T]he general principle is established which Vaughan Williams LJ in Loftus v Roberts,124 expressed in words that were subsequently adopted by Lord Wrenbury, as Buckley J, in Broome v Speak.125 It is that wherever words which by themselves constitute a promise are accompanied by words showing that the promisor is to have a discretion or option as to whether he will carry out that which purports to be the promise, the result is that there is no contract on which an action can be brought at all. The succinct statement of the principle in Leake on Contracts, 3rd ed, p 3: ‘Promissory expressions reserving an option as to the performance do not create a contract’ was approved by the Lord Justice, as it was later by Lord Wright in Hillas & Co Ltd v Arcos Ltd.126
On the other hand, Menzies J (one of the dissentients) said:127 It appears to me that two interpretations of the clause are open. First that it creates no legal obligation at all because what it provides is an illusory promise on the part of the Commonwealth. The second is that it does create an obligation when the conditions stated are fulfilled (1) to determine a subsidy within the limit and (2) to pay the subsidy determined. According to the former interpretation, if the Commonwealth were to determine a subsidy upon imported products it would still be under no obligation to pay the subsidy so determined; according to the latter the
[page 132] Commonwealth’s obligation is both to determine what the subsidy is to be and then to pay it.
Menzies J’s preference was for the latter interpretation. And the case was
clearly one in which much could be said in favour of both views. However, it does little credit to a government to make a promise in a commercial context and then be permitted to say that the promise was merely illusory and not real. The promise should have been treated as enforceable. Moreover, it would be more consistent with the current emphasis on good faith in contract to say that for a promise to be regarded as illusory the discretion must clearly relate to whether any payment at all will be made. [6-39] Vague and uncertain promises. As noted earlier,128 motive is distinct from consideration. But assume that the consideration propounded by a promisee is a promise to show love and affection or a promise not to complain. Are such promises of no value in the eye of the law because they are of no economic value? A pertinent question is whether such a promise could be enforceable in the sense that damages could be awarded for its breach. No authority is known to deny such a remedy.129 In principle, if even nominal damages would be awarded, the promise should serve as good consideration just as a promise to pay a nominal sum does.130 In Dunton v Dunton,131 a majority of the Full Court of the Supreme Court of Victoria held to be a valid consideration a woman’s promise to her former husband not at any time to commit ‘any act whereby she or [her former husband] shall or may become subjected to personal hate, contempt, or ridicule’, and to ‘conduct herself with sobriety, and in a respectable, orderly and virtuous manner, and with all respect’ to her former husband. Hood J, dissenting, would have held the wife’s promise too indefinite to be enforceable and therefore no consideration. White v Bluett132 is sometimes cited as an illustration of illusory consideration. The defendant was sued by his late father’s executor on a promissory note which he had given to his father in respect of a loan. The defence was that he had had just grounds to complain of the distribution which his father had made of his property among his children and that his father had admitted the justice of his complaint; that ‘it was agreed by and between the said J Bluett [(the father)] and the defendant, that the defendant should forever cease to make such complaints’; and that in consideration of that agreement, the father agreed to discharge him from liability on the note and the cause of action in respect of it. The court held the pleaded consideration to be no consideration. Pollock CB observed133 that since the son had no legal right to challenge the father’s distribution, ‘the son’s abstaining from doing what he had no right to do can be no consideration’. Pollock CB and Alderson B noted in effect that since
[page 133] anyone could complain about anything, a contrary holding would mean that a consideration would always be ready to be fabricated and called into service to support any promise. Precisely why (except for policy reasons) a promise to desist from complaining should have been held to be no consideration is not entirely clear. This might have been helpful if the court had discussed whether there was a compromise of a claim made by the son.134 There was no suggestion that the complaints had not been made or that they were not bona fide, and in particular there was no suggestion that the plaintiff had manufactured or contrived a consideration. However, neither difficulty in determining whether the promise to desist was or was not performed, nor the lack of a convenient basis for measurement of any loss or damage caused to the father by a breach (that is by the son’s renewal of his complaints), can scarcely be reasons for the invalidity of consideration. [6-40] Requirements contracts.135 A ‘requirements contract’ is a contract by which a party, who needs supplies of a particular product for a business, undertakes to buy all the requirements of the business for a fixed period from a particular supplier in return for the latter’s promise to supply.136 The price and other terms on which supply is to be made and accepted are stipulated. The agreement will not oblige the buyer to call for any supply at all, the undertaking being in substance no more than not to buy from any other sources.137 The counterpart of a requirements contract, namely, an undertaking to sell to the other party on stated terms any product of a certain description which the supplier may have during a stipulated period, though uncommon, is also conceivable.138 In both classes of case consideration is regarded as being present even though the value of the undertaking is substantially contingent on the will of the party giving it.139
Existing Legal Duties140 Introduction
[6-41] Promise to perform existing legal duty not consideration. Since contract law recognises as valid only those promises which are supported by consideration, that requirement applies to promises by parties to existing contracts in the same way as it applies to promises by persons who are not already contractually bound. A variation to a contract will of [page 134] necessity involve one party making a fresh promise or changing the content of an existing promise.141 Either way there is a new promise (‘variation promise’) which is binding only if supported by consideration.142 As a matter of strict logic, it is difficult to see how an agreement to do what the promisee is already bound to do can constitute consideration for a variation promise. This is, in fact, one aspect of a particular (and troublesome) manifestation of the sufficiency rule. Thus, the traditional view is that the promise to perform (or the performance of) a pre-existing duty is not sufficient consideration for a variation promise. For example, if S has agreed to sell goods to B for $1000, but S and B agree that the price will be increased to $2000, there is no consideration moving from the promisee (S), if S has done no more than repeat the promise to deliver. The general principle was stated by Mason J in Wigan v Edwards143 in these terms:144 The general rule is that a promise to perform an existing duty is no consideration, at least when the promise is made by a party to a pre-existing contract, when it is made to the promisee under that contract, and it is to do no more than the promisor is bound to do under that contract. The rule expresses the concept that the new promise, indistinguishable from the old, is an illusory consideration. And it gives no comfort to a party who by merely threatening a breach of contract seeks to secure an additional contractual benefit from the other party on the footing that the first party’s new promise of performance will provide sufficient consideration for that benefit.
The statement implicitly recognises two exceptions to the rule: it does not apply when the promise is made to a third party: and consideration is present where the plaintiff’s existing legal duty is exceeded. These and other exceptions are considered later.145 More generally, the words ‘at least’ indicate that Mason J was confident of the rule’s operation only within a narrow sphere. In fact, the rule has been questioned and come under so much criticism that its scope and validity are now matters of considerable doubt. It is convenient to consider the decided cases in categories of pre-existing duties.
Public Duties [6-42] Is a promise toperform public duty consideration? In general the courts have treated the promise to perform a public duty as not being sufficient consideration. Thus, in Collins v Godefroy146 the plaintiff sued to recover compensation for his loss of time in attending court under subpoena as a witness for the defendant. It was held that since the law imposed a duty on a person subpoenaed to attend at the court from time to time to give evidence, a promise to remunerate him for doing so was without consideration. Assuming its validity, the principle applies equally to [page 135] promises not to do that which the general law prohibits as to promises to do that which it compels.147 However, in several cases the rule has been avoided, and its validity questioned. A leading case is Ward v Byham.148 The unmarried parents of a child separated and the mother became housekeeper to a man who, with the mother, was ready to let the child live with them. The mother wrote to the father asking that she have the child and that he pay her the £1 per week he was already paying a neighbour to maintain the child. The father wrote agreeing ‘providing you can prove that she will be well looked after and happy and also that she is allowed to decide for herself whether or not she wishes to come and live with you’. The child went to live with the mother to whom the father paid £1 a week until, some seven months later, the mother married, whereupon the father ceased paying. In the father’s appeal against a judgment based on failure to perform the agreement, Morris and Parker LJJ, in brief judgments, held that by the terms of the letter the mother’s obligation was to prove something to the father. Because this went beyond her statutory duty to maintain the child, the father’s promise was supported by consideration.149 However, Lord Denning MR said:150 I approach the case … on the footing that, in looking after the child, the mother is only doing what she is legally bound to do. Even so, I think that there was sufficient consideration to support the promise. I have always thought that a promise to perform an existing duty, or the performance of it, should be regarded as good consideration, because it is a benefit to the person to whom it is given. Take this very case. It is as much a benefit for the father to have the child looked after by the mother as by a neighbour. If he gets the benefit for which he stipulated, he ought to honour his promise, and he ought
not to avoid it by saying that the mother was herself under a duty to maintain the child.
Similarly, in Williams v Williams,151 although a majority of the English Court of Appeal was able to find (or perhaps invent) consideration, in the duty being exceeded, Lord Denning MR reiterated his view that a promise to perform an existing duty is sufficient consideration to support a promise, ‘so long as there is nothing in the transaction which is contrary to the public interest’.152 In Popiw v Popiw153 Hudson J accepted what Lord Denning had said in these cases as a correct statement of the law, but he was also able to find (or invent) consideration on the facts before him. [6-43] Promise to exceed duty good consideration. The leading case Glasbrook Bros Ltd v Glamorgan County Council,154 while acknowledging the [page 136] rule, illustrates that there will be good consideration if the person subject to the public duty promises to do more than what that duty calls for. There was a strike at the plaintiff company’s mine and the manager requested that the defendant council provide a resident garrison of police in order to ensure the protection of the ‘safety men’. The police thought this unnecessary and that adequate protection could be provided in other ways. But, at the manager’s insistence, the council agreed and the manager promised to pay the cost of rationing the garrison and for its services at specified rates. The council’s action to recover £2200 succeeded, since the supply of the garrison went beyond the protection which the police were bound by law to provide.
Contractual Duties General rules [6-44] Promise to perform contractual duty not consideration. In Stilk v Myrick155 two sailors deserted their ship in the course of a voyage and the captain, being unable to find replacements, promised the remaining eight members of the crew (including the plaintiff) that he would divide the wages which the two deserters would have earned among them upon their working the
vessel home. The plaintiff completed the voyage and sued for his share. By his original employment contract the plaintiff was to be paid £5 per month and was bound to do all he could under the ‘emergencies of the voyage’. Lord Ellenborough held that there was no consideration for the promise since the position resulting from the desertion of the two sailors was as much ‘an emergency of the voyage’ as their deaths would have been. Since the plaintiff was already bound by his contract to do all that he could to work the ship home, his promise to do this was no consideration for the promise of extra payment. Although the decision may actually have been based on considerations of public policy, namely, that to allow the action might reward extortion, the case has been taken as authority for the proposition that neither performance of, nor a promise to perform, a contractual duty already owed to the promisor, is good consideration for the promise by the latter. [6-45] Promise or performance beyond existing duty as consideration. Decisions such as Stilk v Myrick156 will be distinguishable if the plaintiff has made a promise which in some way goes beyond the pre-existing contractual duty. Similarly, the existing duty rule will not apply if the duty has been exceeded. Thus, in Hartley v Ponsonby157 a shortage of crew made it perilous to continue the voyage with the result that the [page 137] remaining crew were not bound to continue to serve and a contract for additional payment if they did so was held binding.
Exceptions [6-46] Promises with different contents. In Larkin v Girvan158 Jordan CJ observed that there is a special class of case in which it is necessary to see if consideration was furnished by the promisor as well as by the promisee, namely, ‘[w]here the promise sought to be enforced is found to be a promise to do something which the promisor is already bound to do by a prior enforceable contract with the promisee’. In that case a landowner (the plaintiff) contracted for a builder (the defendant) to build a house for her. There were disputes over alleged defects and the plaintiff threatened to refer the dispute to arbitration under the building contract. The builder promised to remedy any defects within
six months if she would not resort to arbitration. She agreed and later sued for breach of the builder’s undertaking. Jordan CJ apparently had no difficulty in regarding the content of the promise to forbear from arbitrating as having legal value, but observed that if the builder’s promise had not gone beyond the duty which he already owed to the owner, mutuality would have been lacking with the result that the promise to remedy defects within six months would not have been binding, and, presumably, the owner’s only remedy would have been to sue on the original contract. However, he said that the builder had furnished consideration by admitting the owner’s claim which he had previously disputed, thereby saving her the trouble and expense of arbitration. [6-47] Termination of the contract. The principle that a promise to perform a contractual obligation already owed to the other party is no consideration for a return promise by the latter has no application where the earlier obligation is, as part of the agreement, terminated or discharged.159 In other words, if the existing duty is discharged by a contract which includes a promise with the same content as the original promise, the promise will be regarded as binding because consideration is present in the parties’ agreement that the original duty is to be discharged. Nor, generally, will the principle apply if the first agreement can be lawfully terminated. For example, assume that an employee demands higher wages for work which is being done under a contract of employment terminable by one week’s notice by either party. Assume also that, although agreeing to do so, the employer does not pay the increase. Clearly, if the employee had terminated the original contract by one week’s notice, a fresh contract importing the new wage rate for the future would be binding. Unless the circumstances are such that it is impossible to interpret the second contract as a termination of the first, a court will discern an implied agreement to terminate the original contract and consideration will be present.160 [page 138] [6-48] Factual benefit to promisor.161 In Williams v Roffey Bros & Nicholls (Contractors) Ltd162 the English Court of Appeal held that the existing duty rule will not apply if the promisor receives factual benefits from the performance of the duty, or the promisor avoids a ‘disbenefit’ which might have resulted from the other party’s failure to perform.
The plaintiff contracted to do carpentry work on 27 flats in a block which the defendants had contracted to refurbish. The agreed price was £20,000. Of this £16,200 had been paid when the financial difficulties of the plaintiff prompted the defendants to promise to pay an extra sum of £10,300, payable at the rate of £575 for each flat in respect of which the carpentry work was completed. It seems that there was a promise to complete the work. Between the making of this agreement and the plaintiff’s abandonment of the work some eight more flats were completed. Subject to a deduction for certain defects in the work, the court held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover £4600. The obvious objection to this decision is that the plaintiff did less than his contractual duty in performing the work. The work which was done could nevertheless have been regarded as sufficient consideration had the second agreement been in the form of a termination of the old and substitution of the new,163 but the trial judge said this was not the intention of the parties. How then did the court find consideration to be present? Glidewell LJ expressed the law in this way:164 (i)
if A has entered into a contract with B to do work for, or to supply goods or services to, B in return for the payment by B; and
(ii) at some stage before A has completely performed his obligation under the contract B has reason to doubt whether A will, or will be able to, complete his side of the bargain; and (iii) B thereupon promises A an additional payment in return for A’s promise to perform his contractual obligations on time; and (iv) as a result of giving his promise, B obtains a practical benefit, or obviates a disbenefit; and (v) B’s promise is not given as a result of economic duress or fraud on the part of A; then (vi) the benefit to B is capable of being consideration for B’s promise, so that the promise will be legally binding.
The benefits which the defendants were said to have obtained (and ‘disbenefits’ which they may have avoided) were a measure of protection against the risk that as a result of the main contract to refurbish they would [page 139] be liable to pay liquidated damages for delay, and the avoidance of the trouble and expense of finding a replacement for the plaintiff. This pragmatic approach to consideration was also applied by Russell and Purchas LJJ. The former was prepared to adopt165 such an approach where the promisor gains an advantage arising out of the continuing relationship with the promisee, and the latter
emphasised166 the ‘commercial advantage to both sides’ in the agreement. With respect, it is difficult to reconcile this approach with the prior case law. Moreover, if factual benefit is capable of being regarded as consideration the reality is that the existing duty rule no longer applies, for these types of benefits will be present in every case.167 Although it can certainly be argued that the existing duty rule should be abolished,168 this was not the intention of the court. In any event, the more fundamental criticism which can be advanced against the case is simply that the consideration requirement was applied in a way which is contrary to that adopted by the High Court.169 The statement of Glidewell LJ expresses the consideration provided by the plaintiff in element (iv), whereas the consideration in fact offered by the defendants is in element (iii). In other words, the consideration which was said to support the promise was not in fact referable to the promise. Nevertheless, the case has not so far been doubted and was in fact applied in the Supreme Court of New South Wales by Santow J in Musumeci v Winadell Pty Ltd.170 [6-49] Promise to perform a duty to third party consideration. If A already owes a contractual duty to X, and B promises to pay A a specified sum in consideration for A’s promise to perform (or actual performance of) the duty owed to X, B is bound by the promise since A is regarded as having provided consideration in the promise to perform (or the performance of) the duty owed to X. In Shadwell v Shadwell,171 the plaintiff, a practising barrister, when he was already engaged to marry Ellen Nicholl, received a letter from his uncle, the defendant, which contained a statement that as he was ‘glad to hear’ of the intended marriage and, as he ‘promised to assist’ the plaintiff ‘at starting’, was ‘happy’ to say that he would pay ‘£150 yearly during my life and until your annual income derived from your profession of a Chancery barrister shall amount to 600 guineas’. The marriage occurred but there was no suggestion that the plaintiff had promised his uncle that he would proceed with the marriage. The plaintiff’s annual income as a barrister at no time reached 600 guineas. The yearly instalments of £150 were not all paid during the uncle’s life and, after his death, his legal personal representatives were sued by the nephew for the arrears. A [page 140]
majority of the court held that the nephew had provided consideration by marrying. It was said172 that this involved both a detriment to the nephew and a benefit to the uncle. The detriment was that the nephew ‘may have made a most material change in his position, and induced the object of his affection to do the same, and may have incurred pecuniary liabilities resulting in embarrassments, which would be in every sense a loss if the income which had been promised should be withheld’. The benefit to the uncle was that the marriage was ‘an object of interest to a near relative’. Unfortunately, the majority judgment does not advert to the fact that the marriage was nothing more than a performance of an existing contractual obligation. Thus, it does not consider such possibilities as that consideration might exist in the nephew’s actually marrying as distinct from breaching the contract to marry and paying damages for that breach, or in the nephew’s forgoing the right to negotiate with Ellen Nicholl for a discharge of the contract to marry. So far as the suggested benefit to the uncle is concerned, the majority judgment itself described it as a merely ‘sentimental’ one. Thus, although Shadwell v Shadwell may exemplify the proposition that performance of an existing contractual duty owed to a third party can be good consideration, the actual reasoning of the majority judgment lends little support to it.173 However, the view that either a promise to perform or the actual performance of an existing contractual duty is capable of being sufficient consideration was confirmed by the Privy Council in New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v A M Satterthwaite & Co Ltd (The Eurymedon).174 A firm of stevedores negligently unloaded goods from a ship with consequent damage to the goods. The consignee sued the stevedores for damages. The stevedores, who were bound by a contract with the shipowner to unload the goods, pleaded a clause which specified the time limit within which such an action could be brought. This clause was in fact contained in a contract to which it was not otherwise a party, and the issue was whether the stevedores had provided consideration. It was held that, vis-à-vis the consignee, the stevedores’ unloading was consideration notwithstanding that they were already contractually bound to the shipowner. The majority said:175 An agreement to do an act which the promisor is under an existing obligation to a third party to do, may quite well amount to valid consideration and does so in the present case: the promisee obtains the benefit of a direct obligation which he can enforce.
Similarly, in Pao On v Lau Yiu Long176 the Privy Council did not doubt177‘that a promise to perform, or the performance of, a pre-existing contractual obligation to a third party can be valid consideration’.
[page 141] It might be argued that, where the propounded consideration is executory, that is, a promise to perform the duty owed to the third party, detriment is involved in that the person giving that promise is exposed to a second possible action for breach of the same contractual promise, whereas if the propounded consideration is executed, that is, the actual performance of the duty already owed to the third party, no detriment is involved. However, the cases clearly support the view that to distinguish between the giving of a promise to perform obligations under a contract with a third party and actual performance of them is commercially unacceptable. Either may count as good and sufficient consideration.
Compromise and Forbearance to Sue178 [6-50] Consideration in compromise. If it stood alone the existing duty rule would be a serious obstacle to the orderly settlement of contractual disputes. Assume that A and B are subject to a contract which, when properly interpreted, obliges A to pay B $200. Assume further that A is under the honest misapprehension that the contract requires A to pay B $100, that is, an act which is less beneficial to B. Now, B could go to court and ask for a ruling on what the contract requires A to do. But the prospect of litigation is never inviting and the law should encourage A and B to settle their dispute. Assume then that A and B enter into an agreement whereby B agrees to accept $150, in return for A’s promise to abandon the claim that A is entitled to perform by paying B $100. Assume finally that B discovers the true construction of the original contract and refuses to honour the agreement to accept $150 as performance. In order to enforce the agreement by B, A must show that consideration was provided by promising to pay $150. Application of the existing duty rule would necessarily lead to the conclusion that no consideration was provided. After all, A has promised to do less than what the contract actually requires. However, by interpreting the second agreement as a bona fide compromise of the dispute the law regards B’s promise as supported by consideration. The guiding principle, as stated by Mason J in Wigan v Edwards,179 is that:180 a promise to do precisely what the promisor is already bound to do is a sufficient consideration, when it is given by way of a bona fide compromise of a disputed claim, the promisor having asserted that he is not bound to perform the obligation under the pre-existing contract or that he has a cause of action under that contract.
The leading modern cases181 show that the giving up of a seriously asserted claim may result in an enforceable compromise if the assertion was made bona fide.182 [page 142] [6-51] Claim may be bad in law. What is the position if it transpires that the claim by one (or both) of the parties under the original contract was unfounded? Consistently with what is said above,183 the compromise contract is still valid. The fact that the claim is bad in law does not prevent its compromise being valuable consideration.184 It does not matter that the promisee knew the promisor’s claim to be bad. Nor is it necessary for the promisee to have issued proceedings to enforce the claim. Again, a promise to abandon a suit in whole or part already commenced is a valuable consideration where there was a bona fide claim.185 Similar principles apply where there is a promise to forbear (or actual forbearance) to enforce a claim, rather than its abandonment.186 It must be acknowledged that acceptance of compromise of a bona fide claim as consideration derives more from practical necessity than from logic. It would be intolerable that it should be open to a party to undo a compromise by showing that after all the other party’s claim could not have succeeded. On the other hand, where it transpires that the claim was not even an arguable one, it is difficult to find anything of legal value which the claimant has surrendered. [6-52] Claim must be honestly made. A promise not to sue at all, that is, an abandonment of a substantive claim, is a valuable consideration, if there is either liability or a bona fide belief of liability.187 If it were not for the requirement that the claim be ‘a serious claim honestly made’188 it would be possible by issuing or threatening the issue of proceedings, or by withholding performance of an existing contract, to extract an unfair advantage. In Ballantyne v Phillott189 Dixon CJ, when inquiring into what ‘value or import’ was to be found in the alleged surrender of rights in that case, observed that the other party could have expected trouble if he had not settled. Since this can probably be said in relation to all serious claims which are asserted bona fide, it indicates a ‘benefit’ to the other party which will be inherent in every giving up of such a claim. Moreover, true to its lack of concern with adequacy of consideration, so long as the claim is honestly made it does not matter that one party benefits more from the compromise than the other.190
[page 143] [6-53] Vexatious and frivolous claims. Is ‘good faith’ the only test which the asserted claim must satisfy? In Miles v New Zealand Alford Estate Co191 Bowen LJ considered192 that it must also appear that the claim was not vexatious or frivolous. In Wigan v Edwards193 the High Court did not decide whether the more stringent formulation of Bowen LJ was correct. All members of the court held that a vendor’s undertaking was binding, as having been given as part of a compromise of the purchasers’ claim — that they were not bound to perform — in which they honestly believed. Mason J also considered that the claim was not frivolous or vexatious. Clearly, it would be unlikely for a court to find that a claim which a contracting party honestly believed to be well founded was in fact vexatious or frivolous.194 [6-54] Accord and satisfaction. Analysis of a compromise agreement may yield more than one possible legal construct. The bargained-for consideration may be the release of a cause of action, or a promise of release.195 In each case it is said that an ‘accord’, that is, agreement, has been reached, but only in the former is the cause of action extinguished immediately. In the former there is an ‘accord and satisfaction’, effective at law, by virtue of the acceptance of the new promise in satisfaction of the cause of action. The latter — a mere promise to release — is called an ‘accord executory’. Although effective in equity as a contract itself, the cause of action is extinguished only when the promise is performed. Identification of the bargained-for consideration has presented particular difficulty in this context. In McDermott v Black196 Dixon J explained:197 The essence of accord and satisfaction is the acceptance by the plaintiff of something in place of his cause of action. What he takes is a matter depending on his own consent or agreement. It may be a promise or contract or it may be the act or thing promised. But, whatever it is, until it is provided and accepted the cause of action remains alive and unimpaired. The accord is the agreement or consent to accept the satisfaction. Until the satisfaction is given the accord remains executory and cannot bar the claim. The distinction between an accord executory and an accord and satisfaction remains as valid and as important as ever. An accord executory neither extinguishes the old cause of action nor affords a new one … An executory promise or series of promises given in consideration of the abandonment of the claim may be accepted in substitution or satisfaction of the existing liability. Or, on the other hand, promises may be given by the party liable that he will satisfy the claim by doing an act, making over a thing or paying an ascertained sum of money and the other party may agree to accept, not
[page 144]
the promise, but the act, thing or money in satisfaction of his claim. If the agreement is to accept the promise in satisfaction, the discharge of the liability is immediate; if the performance, then there is no discharge unless and until the promise is performed.
Although usually the subject of an express agreement, there is no objection to an implied abandonment of a claim.198 For example, in Allied Marine Transport Ltd v Vale do Rio Doce Navegacao SA (The Leonides D)199 the English Court of Appeal pointed out that a reference to arbitration might be discharged by the parties conducting themselves in a way which shows that each has abandoned its claim to receive an award. [6-55] Forbearance to sue. A promise not to sue for a limited period, definite or indefinite, is a valuable consideration where the substantive claim is one for which the other party is liable.200 Thus, if A owes B $10,000 due on 1 March, on that day A may ask B not to sue for the debt. An agreement might be reached, providing that in consideration of B not suing until, say, 1 June, A agrees to grant B a mortgage of A’s house. The promise by B may be enforced by A. The same is true if, at A’s request, B forbears to sue until 1 June on the understanding that A will provide a mortgage as security. In such a case the issue will usually be whether B has provided consideration for A’s promise. Where the promise to forbear is not for a fixed time, a reasonable time is implied,201 but where the agreed consideration is simply actual forbearance the notion of forbearance for a reasonable period is apparently not implied, ‘some degree of’ or a ‘certain amount of’ forbearance being sufficient.202 A forbearance to sue, whether in a court of law or some other forum for dispute resolution, is distinguishable from the giving up of a claim.203 The giving up of a claim raises the single issue of the legal value of the abandonment of an invalid claim. A forbearance may or may not raise this issue, but any forbearance which is less than permanent will raise the different question whether a forbearance must be of certain minimum duration in order to be valid consideration. Since forbearance from acting in a specified way is generally a valid consideration, it is in principle difficult to see why a forbearance from issuing proceedings, or from further prosecuting particular proceedings already on foot, for even a very short time, should not be a good consideration since the adequacy of consideration is not a concern of the courts. This approach has in fact been taken in the cases.204 Thus, a creditor’s forbearance (or the promise thereof) will support a promise by the debtor to pay interest on the debt or to furnish security for it, or to procure a guarantee or other species of promise by a third party. However, mere temporary forbearance to sue
[page 145] where there is no liability is no consideration, even if the claim is disputed.205 It is no part of the law that contracts involving these forms of consideration must be express, or that these forms of consideration must have been identified by the parties expressly. Thus, a request to forbear, while essential, need not be express.206 However, a forbearance (like a release) not requested expressly or by implication, or requested but given without being induced by that request, is no consideration.207 The cases suggest that a request will be easily inferred, at least where a debtor promises the creditor to secure payment of the debt.208 Careful construction of documents and analysis of all the circumstances may warrant a finding that there was an implied promise to surrender a cause of action or to forbear from suing and that the parties had agreed that this, or the actual surrender or forbearance itself, was the consideration bargained for by the promisee as the price of a promise which itself may have been implied rather than express. The difficult question is: on the facts, was a release or forbearance, or a promise of one or the other, requested?
Part Payment of Debt The rule: not consideration [6-56] Origin of the rule. Before the doctrine of consideration developed as a constraint on the action of assumpsit, the proposition that part payment of a debt could not satisfy the debt was judicially accepted, at least as early as 1455.209 The rule was stated by the Court of Common Pleas in 1602 in Pinnel’s Case:210 It was resolved by the whole court, that payment of a lesser sum on the day in satisfaction of a greater, cannot be any satisfaction for the whole, because it appears to the Judges that by no possibility, a lesser sum can be a satisfaction to the plaintiff for a greater sum: but the gift of a horse, hawk, or robe, etc in satisfaction is good. For it shall be intended that a horse, hawk, or robe, etc might be more beneficial to the plaintiff than the money, in respect of some circumstance, or otherwise the plaintiff would not have accepted of it in satisfaction. But when the whole sum is due, by no intendment the acceptance of parcel can be a satisfaction to the plaintiff …
The judgment goes on to make it clear that, payment of a lesser sum having been made earlier than the date for payment, the defendant might have succeeded if he had pleaded an accord and satisfaction rather than that he had made part payment which the plaintiff had accepted in full satisfaction.
[page 146] Pinnel’s Case was an action on a bond. A century later in Cumber v Wayne211 the King’s Bench held that where a debt of £15 was owed, payment of a smaller amount could not be relied on as a satisfaction unless there was consideration for the relinquishment of the balance, and similarly that the creditor’s agreement to accept a promissory note for £5 was not a good plea to an action for the £15. [6-57] Acceptance of the rule under the modern law. Although the origin of the rules relating to surrender of the whole or part of a debt antedates the origin of the contractual doctrine of consideration, and notwithstanding that, conceptually, the extinguishment of a chose in action such as a debt differs from the giving of a promise, by the time Pinnel’s Case212 was decided it was probably accepted that consideration was necessary for the creation of a promissory obligation. The modern cases refer to Pinnel’s Case and Cumber v Wayne213 as illustrating the contractual doctrine of consideration. This explanation received the imprimatur of the House of Lords in Foakes v Beer.214 Mrs Beer was the judgment creditor of Dr Foakes for £2090.19.0. Dr Foakes was therefore liable to pay that amount as a debt due to Mrs Beer. They entered into a written agreement reciting his request for time to pay the debt, and the parties’ agreement that ‘in consideration’ of his paying to her £500 forthwith in part-satisfaction ‘and on condition of his paying’ £150 on 1 July and 1 January or within one calendar month after each of those days in each year until the full sum of £2090.19.0 should have been fully paid and satisfied, she agreed not to enforce the judgment. Foakes ultimately paid off the judgment debt but Beer sued him for £360, the interest on the debt. He pleaded the agreement, and she replied that the agreement was not binding for lack of consideration. Beer was successful. Even if there was a promise by Beer to forgive the whole debt including interest (which was not considered to be the proper construction of the agreement) there was no consideration to support the promise.
Exceptions [6-58] Deeds and nominal consideration. The easiest way to make binding a promise to accept part of a debt as a discharge of the whole is to put the agreement in a deed. Consideration is not then required.215 Apart from the deed (and of course compromise of the claim),216 a familiar
way of finding consideration is in the presence of nominal consideration. This device was recognised in Pinnel’s Case217 itself, in references to ‘the gift of a horse, hawk, or robe, etc [which] might be more beneficial to the plaintiff than the money’. Similarly, payment at a date before the debt is due, payment at a place selected for the convenience of [page 147] the creditor (not being the place originally agreed), or the acceptance of a bill of exchange (other than a personal cheque) all count as nominal consideration. The presence of consideration is enough to take the agreement outside the general rule even though it will usually be purely nominal. The impact is that a promise to accept $999 in discharge of a debt of $1000 presently due is not supported by consideration whereas a promise to accept $1 and an old sandshoe in complete discharge of the $1000 debt is enforceable. The absurdity of this is patent. [6-59] Part payment of a debt by a third party. Acceptance by a creditor of part payment by a third party in full settlement is a good defence to the creditor’s action against the debtor for the balance.218 The explanation usually given is that it would be a fraud on the third party or a breach of contract (which the court will not facilitate) if the creditor were allowed to recover. [6-60] Compositions with creditors. Under a composition agreement, each creditor agrees to forgo in part his or her legal rights in consideration of a similar undertaking by each other creditor party to the composition,219 and so it is clear that the composition is enforceable as between the creditor parties to it. Under the general law, assuming that the debtor is a party to the composition so that no difficulty of privity of contract exists,220 the composition will be binding if the debtor has procured the participation of the creditors in the composition.221 Where, however, is the consideration moving from the debtor which enables the debtor to defend an action by a creditor for recovery of the full amount of the debt? First, the principle of Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd222 may be available: each creditor’s promise may have been made to the debtor and the other creditors jointly and so be enforceable by the debtor so long as consideration has been furnished by the debtor’s co-joint promisees.
Second, there are suggestions that it would be fraud on the other creditors (and on the debtor) for a creditor to recover in breach of the composition agreement since, by the making of the agreement, the other creditors have been induced to refrain from seeking recovery of their debts and the debtor from paying them, with the result that the plaintiff creditor would get an unintended preference.223 [page 148] Finally, it has been suggested224 that ‘compositions with creditors may be valid despite the absence of consideration or despite the inability to perceive consideration moving from the debtor’. Division 6 of Pt IV of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth) regulates compositions (and schemes of arrangement) between bankrupts and their creditors.
Criticism [6-61] Introduction. The most fundamental question about consideration today is whether the requirement should be retained. In 1937 the English Law Revision Committee said225 ‘inconvenience and possible injustice resulting from the doctrine of consideration raise the question whether it presents countervailing advantages which justify its retention’. Developments since 1937, not only in the pragmatic approach to consideration which pervades the commercial contract cases,226 but also in the law of estoppel,227 indicate that a requirement of consideration is more likely to cause inconvenience than injustice. There is in fact little likelihood of the requirement being abolished, even if that were thought desirable.228 Another, also fairly fundamental question, is whether contract law should lend its aid to the enforcement of promises without a requirement of consideration being satisfied. This point was alluded to earlier in the discussion of contract theory.229 It may also be pointed out that American law, under the guidance of the Restatements,230 has got on quite well with a body of law dealing with the enforcement of promises not supported by consideration, as, in effect, contractual promises.231 There is an air of unreality to many of the rules discussed above, and their operation has been criticised. For example, in Ward v Byham,232 Lord Denning
MR accepted as a general proposition that performance of or a promise to perform an existing legal duty of any class should be regarded as good consideration because233 ‘it is a benefit to the person to whom it is given’, and if a person ‘gets the benefit for which he stipulated he ought to honour his promise’. The discussion concentrates on the existing duty rules as those most in need of reform. There is, however, a more general approach to the law which should be mentioned, namely, the adoption of a subjective notion of consideration.234 [page 149] [6-62] Public policy. The distinction between a promise to perform an existing duty owed to a party to a contract and one owed to a third party seems illogical, particularly where235 the defendant has a financial interest in the performance of the contract with the third party. The promise is still to do precisely what is required under an existing obligation. There is no public policy objection to regarding the promise as a sufficient consideration, particularly when regard is had to the concept of economic duress.236 Similarly, the distinction between a promise to perform a public duty and a promise to perform a private (contractual) duty is artificial. Consideration is an inappropriate mechanism for controlling the promises of those subject to a duty owed to the public at large. While it would, for example, be against the public interest to permit a public officer to recover a promised reward for carrying out official duties, no comparable considerations apply in the case of a promise to perform contractual obligations owed to a party to a contract. A promise to perform a public duty should therefore be regarded as a sufficient consideration.237 But the enforcement of the promise which it supports should be denied if public policy so requires.238 [6-63] Economic duress. Given that a promisor (A) has regarded a promise by B to perform an existing duty as consideration for a promise on A’s part, the law serves no useful purpose in denying the enforceability of A’s promise on the basis that it was not given for value. What is of concern to the law is that A’s promise should not have been obtained by extortion. Thus, A’s promise to pay B extra money if B will do that which B is already contractually bound to A to do may raise the spectre of economic duress. Why would A make or promise an additional payment unless B was refusing to perform without it? If the
circumstances satisfy the tests for operative economic duress,239 the contract will be voidable by A even if consideration is present. It is suggested that public policy has no real relevance to the contractual duty cases240 and that promises to perform such duties should be regarded as valid. The relevance of economic duress is that if a party entered into the agreement as a result of duress there is a right to avoid the contract. The same is true of promises induced by factors such as misrepresentation. Although such factors do not deny the validity of the promise, they nevertheless provide an important safety valve. [6-64] Business practice and subjectivity in consideration. Consideration is neither entirely logical nor internally consistent. In many respects the concept is very subjective. In other words, in deciding whether there is something of value, the law generally takes the view that (absent [page 150] policy issues) what a promisor regards as valuable will amount to consideration. We can see this, for example, in the rule that consideration must be sufficient but need not be adequate. This illustrates that the courts are alive to the need to protect properly negotiated agreements by which each party considers that a valuable benefit has been obtained under a contract. On the other hand, we have seen that objectivity is sometimes insisted on in the context of the existing duty rule. In other words, because the promise to perform a duty already owed is objectively equal to that duty, and because the duty already exists, there is no consideration. It is by no means clear that this approach reflects what goes on in contract practice. Indeed, as far back as Foakes v Beer241 Lord Blackburn said:242 What principally weighs with me in thinking that Lord Coke [in Pinnel’s Case]243 made a mistake of fact is my conviction that all men of business, whether merchants or tradesmen, do every day recognise and act on the ground that prompt payment of a part of their demand may be more beneficial to them than it would be to insist on their rights and enforce payment of the whole. Even where the debtor is perfectly solvent, and sure to pay at last, this often is so. Where the credit of the debtor is doubtful it must be more so.
Although he did not dissent from the opinion that a promise to pay part of a debt cannot be consideration, other judges have not been so timid. For example, the majority decision in New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v A M Satterthwaite & Co Ltd (The Eurymedon)244 is clearly based on the need to ensure that legal
recognition is given to commercial understandings as to responsibility in arrangements for the carriage of goods. The question may therefore be raised, in relation to the existing duty rule: why not regard the promise to perform such a duty as valid consideration whenever the other party treated it as valuable? Adoption of this view does not involve the abolition of the requirement of consideration. In fact, it merely requires an extension of the view that the bargain element — a central feature of consideration — may be satisfied even though, objectively, the bargain had no value. 1.
See generally K O Shatwell, ‘The Doctrine of Consideration in the Modern Law’ (1955) 1 Syd LR 289; Sutton, Consideration Reconsidered, 1974; K C T Sutton, ‘Promises and Consideration’ in Finn, ed, Essays on Contract, 1987, p 35.
2.
Hence the description of some promises as ‘nudum pactum’ (ex nudo pacto non oritur actio). See, eg Pillans v Van Mierop (1765) 3 Burr 1663 at 1670, 1671; 97 ER 1035 at 1038, 1039.
3.
See the discussion by the English Law Revision Committee, Sixth Interim Report, Cmd 5449, 1937, para 26.
4.
Cf Chapter 8.
5.
(1967) 119 CLR 460.
6.
(1967) 119 CLR 460 at 499. See also Woolworths Ltd v Kelly (1991) 22 NSWLR 189 at 221 (consideration ‘deeply embedded in Australian law’). Cf O’Sullivan v Aarons (1866) 5 SCR (NSW) L 353; Larkin v Girvan (1940) 40 SR (NSW) 365.
7.
As in Wilkinson v Coverdale (1793) 1 Esp 75; 170 ER 284.
8.
See, eg Parastatidis v Kotaridis [1978] VR 449.
9.
Wilkinson v Coverdale (1793) 1 Esp 75; 170 ER 284.
10.
See [7-01]–[7-23].
11.
Indeed, as explained later (see [6-19]–[6-22]) a promisor is bound to perform a promise only if consideration was given for it by the promisee.
12.
See Simpson, A History of the Common Law of Contract, 1975.
13.
(1583) Cro Eliz 126 at 126; 78 ER 383 at 384.
14.
See [6-08].
15.
(1765) 3 Burr 1663; 97 ER 1035.
16.
(1778) 7 TR 350n; 101 ER 1014n.
17.
(1778) 7 TR 350n at 350n; 101 ER 1014 at 1014n.
18.
For a suggested return to the views of Lord Mansfield see English Law Revision Committee, Sixth Interim Report, Cmd 5449, 1937, paras 29–30. And cf Vantage Navigation Corp v Suhail and Saud Bahwan Building Materials LLC (The Alev) [1989] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 138 at 145 (‘[u]ltimately the question of consideration is a formality’); R S Summers, ‘The Formal Theory of Law — Criteria of Validity for Contracts’ (1995) 9 JCL 29 at 30–1.
19.
(1782) 1 Cowp 289 at 290; 98 ER 1091. Cf Atkins v Hill (1775) 1 Cowp 184; 98 ER 1088; Trueman v
Fenton (1777) 2 Cowp 544; 98 ER 1232. 20.
Longridge v Dorville (1821) 5 B & Ald 117 at 122; 106 ER 1136 at 1138.
21.
(1840) 11 Ad & El 438; 113 ER 482.
22.
See [15-02], [15-04]–[15-26].
23.
(1840) 11 Ad & El 438 at 450; 113 ER 482 at 486.
24.
(1840) 11 Ad & El 438 at 450–1; 113 ER 482 at 487.
25.
Cf Lampleigh v Brathwait (1615) Hob 105; 80 ER 255 and see further [6-13]–[6-14], [6-30].
26.
See Woolworths Ltd v Kelly (1991) 22 NSWLR 189 and further [6-15]–[6-18]. But cf [6-48] (whether factual benefit sufficient).
27.
Cf Chief Commissioner of State Revenue v Dick Smith Electronics Holdings Pty Ltd (2005) 221 CLR 496 at 519–20: 213 ALR 230 at 247; [2005] HCA 3 at [79].
28.
(1875) LR 10 Ex 153 at 162. Cf Thomas v Thomas (1842) 2 QB 851 at 859; 114 ER 330 at 333–4.
29.
Cf Beaton v McDivitt (1987) 13 NSWLR 162 at 181. See further [6-48].
30.
Hamer v Sidway 124 NY 538; 27 NE 256 (1891).
31.
See on the unilateral contract concept [3-49].
32.
Williston on Contracts, 3rd ed, Vol 1, §102, pp 375–6. Cf Wyatt v Ball [1955] St R Qd 515 at 524.
33.
See [6-04].
34.
Pollock’s Principles of Contract, 8th ed, 1911, p 175. Cf Salmond and Williams, Principles of the Law of Contracts, 2nd ed, 1945, p 101.
35.
[1915] AC 847 at 855.
36.
Corbin on Contracts, Vol 1, 1963, §110, p 492.
37.
The section also states that it may ‘be given by the promisee or by some other person’, but this does not represent Australian law; see [6-19].
38.
Atiyah, Consideration in Contracts: A Fundamental Restatement, 1971, p 60.
39.
G H Treitel, ‘Consideration: a Critical Analysis of Professor Atiyah’s Fundamental Restatement’ (1976) 50 ALJ 439 at 449.
40.
Australian Woollen Mills Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth (1954) 92 CLR 424.
41.
Beaton v McDivitt (1987) 13 NSWLR 162 at 181.
42.
See the analysis by Brian Coote, ‘The Essence of Contract — Part II’ (1989) 1 JCL 183 especially at 191ff.
43.
On deeds generally see Norton on Deeds, 2nd ed, 1928. See also notes in (1978) 52 ALJ 391 and 454; (1980) 54 ALJ 46 and 424; and Mr Justice Needham, ‘Deeds-Formalities’ (1985) 1 Aust Bar Rev 3.
44.
See Westpac Banking Corp v Dawson (1990) 19 NSWLR 614. See further on the execution of documents by corporations [15-58], [15-59].
45.
See generally Chapter 39.
46.
Rose v Commissioner of Stamps (SA) (1979) 22 SASR 84.
47.
The promise may be breached before it was due to be performed; see [30-28].
48.
See also [6-18].
49.
Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co [1893] 1 QB 256 (see [3-16]).
50.
See further [6-15]–[6-18], [6-53].
51.
See, eg Thomas v Thomas (1842) 2 QB 851 at 859–60; 114 ER 330 at 333–4. Cf Director of Public Prosecutions (Vic) v Le (2007) 240 ALR 204 at 215–16; [2007] HCA 52 at [39]–[40]. But cf the civil law concept of ‘causa’: Smith v Jenkins (1970) 119 CLR 397 at 411.
52.
Cf Beaton v McDivitt (1987) 13 NSWLR 162 at 181. And see Samuel Stoljar, ‘Bargain and Nonbargain Promises’ (1988) 18 UWALR 119.
53.
Arrale v Costain Civil Engineering Ltd [1976] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 98 at 106. And cf Wigan v English & Scottish Law Life Assurance Association [1909] 1 Ch 291.
54.
Brikom Investments Ltd v Carr [1979] QB 467 at 490.
55.
See [3-40].
56.
[1893] 1 QB 256 (see [3-16]). Cf Jennings v Radio Station KSCS 96.3 Inc 708 SW 2d 60 (1986).
57.
See [6-07]–[6-11].
58.
See generally [6-23]–[6-27].
59.
[1908] 1 KB 280. Cf Denton v Great Northern Railway Co (1856) 5 El & Bl 860; 119 ER 701.
60.
But see the interpretation of the case in Williams v Roffey Bros & Nicholls (Contractors) Ltd [1991] 1 QB 1 at 22.
61.
(1954) 92 CLR 424.
62.
(1954) 92 CLR 424 at 456–7.
63.
(1954) 92 CLR 424 at 461.
64.
(1954) 92 CLR 424 at 461.
65.
See (1955) 93 CLR 546.
66.
See, eg Thomas v Thomas (1842) 2 QB 851 at 859; 114 ER 330 at 333–4; Tweddle v Atkinson (1861) 1 B & S 393 at 398, 399; 121 ER 762 at 763–4.
67.
Cf Barber v Fox (1682) 2 Wms Saund 134 at 137; 85 ER 859 at 866.
68.
For more recent authorities see, eg Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v Selfridge & Co Ltd [1915] AC 847; Scruttons Ltd v Midland Silicones Ltd [1962] AC 446; Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd (1967) 119 CLR 460.
69.
See [16-03].
70.
See [6-08].
71.
See Pico Hildings Inc v Wave Vistas Pty Ltd (formerly Turf Club Australia Pty Ltd) (2005) 214 ALR 392 at 407; [2005] HCA 13 at [66].
72.
(1967) 119 CLR 460. See Coote, Contract as Assumption: Essays on a Theme, 2010, ch 5.
73.
(1967) 119 CLR 460 at 478–9, 492–3.
74.
(1967) 119 CLR 460 at 486. McTiernan J expressed no opinion.
75.
(1967) 119 CLR 460 at 493.
76.
Jones v Robinson (1847) 1 Ex 454; 154 ER 193; Fleming v Bank of New Zealand [1900] AC 577.
77.
See Director of Public Prosecutions (Vic) v Le (2007) 240 ALR 204 at 229; [2007] HCA 52 at [115]. For the reasons supporting the approach see Woolworths Ltd v Kelly (1991) 22 NSWLR 189 at 193–4.
78.
Thomas v Thomas (1842) 2 QB 851 at 859; 114 ER 330 at 333–4.
79.
[1933] 1 KB 793.
80.
See [26-01].
81.
See [25-22]. However, where the performance of a promise is illegal, the contract may have to be treated as illegal from its very inception. See [25-10]. For the impact of subsequent illegality see [3340]–[33-42]. On the severance of invalid from valid promises see [27-29], [27-30], [27-31].
82.
See, eg Alexander v Rayson [1936] 1 KB 169 at 182; Barba v Gas & Fuel Corp of Victoria (1976) 136 CLR 120; 12 ALR 649.
83.
See, eg [22-12].
84.
See, eg [23-07].
85.
See, eg [24-08].
86.
See Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, para 20-025.
87.
(1842) 2 QB 851; 114 ER 330. Compare the holding in Barnett v Ira L & A C Berk Pty Ltd (1952) 52 SR (NSW) 268 that the heavily qualified and thus minimal obligations undertaken by the seller of a motor car in that case were sufficient to support a promise to buy.
88.
[1960] AC 87.
89.
(1842) 3 QB 234; 114 ER 496.
90.
In this respect the case might well be decided differently today under the sale of goods legislation. For the terms implied thereby see [11-18]–[11-22].
91.
Hopkinson v Logan (1839) 5 M & W 241; 151 ER 103. For a statutory exception see [6-33].
92.
See [6-51].
93.
[1893] 1 QB 256 (see [3-16]).
94.
(1615) Hob 105; 80 ER 255.
95.
(1615) Hob 105 at 106; 80 ER 255 at 255.
96.
Pao On v Lau Yiu Long [1980] AC 614. See also Re Douglas; Ex parte Starkey (1987) 75 ALR 97.
97.
(1615) Hob 105; 80 ER 255 (see [6-30]).
98.
See [6-06].
99.
See S J Stoljar, ‘The Consideration of Request’ (1966) 5 MULR 314.
100. See Kennedy v Brown (1863) 13 CBNS 677; 143 ER 268. 101. [1892] 1 Ch 104. 102. [1892] 1 Ch 104 at 115–16. 103. Cf Way v Latilla [1937] 3 All ER 759 and see further Chapter 38. See also Fung, Pre-contractual Liability Rights and Remedies: Restitution and Promissory Estoppel, 1999, Chs 5 and 6. 104. See further [6-54]. 105. A transaction which fails as a release cannot take effect as an accord and satisfaction. See Baltic Shipping Co v Merchant ‘Mikhail Lermontov’ (1994) 36 NSWLR 361 at 370. 106. See also Cheques Act 1986 (Cth), s 35(1)(a). 107. Cf Oliver v Davis [1949] 2 KB 727; Hasan v Willson [1977] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 43. 108. See [28-16]. 109. See generally [38-06].
110. See, eg [35-38]. 111. See generally ACT: Limitation Act 1985, s 32; NSW: Limitation Act 1969, s 54; NT: Limitation Act 1981, s 41; Qld: Limitation of Actions Act 1974, s 35(3); SA: Limitation of Actions Act 1936, s 42; Tas: Limitation Act 1974, s 29(4); Vic: Limitation of Actions Act 1958, s 24(3); WA: Limitation Act 1935, s 44. 112. See [15-19]. 113. For legislative reform, see [15-24], [15-27]–[15-37]. 114. See generally [6-44]–[6-49]. 115. See [6-24]. 116. See [8-06]. 117. Cf [14-13]. 118. See [6-38]. 119. See [6-37], [6-39]. 120. See [4-01]–[5-03]. 121. Cf Coghlan v S H Lock (Australia) Ltd (1987) 8 NSWLR 88 at 94 (PC) (promise to entertain a request not consideration). 122. (1969) 121 CLR 353. See also British Empire Films Pty Ltd v Oxford Theatres Pty Ltd [1943] VLR 163; Biotechnology Australia Pty Ltd v Pace (1988) 15 NSWLR 130 at 151. 123. (1969) 121 CLR 353 at 356. Cf at 359–61. 124. (1902) 18 TLR 532 at 534. 125. [1903] 1 Ch 586 at 599. 126. (1932) 147 LT 503 at 517. 127. (1969) 121 CLR 353 at 363. Cf at 370–1. 128. See [6-15]. 129. Cf Director of Public Prosecutions (Vic) v Le (2007) 240 ALR 204 at 215–16, 228; [2007] HCA 52 at [39]–[40], [110]. 130. Cf Bank of Nova Scotia v MacLellan (1977) 78 DLR (3d) 1. 131. (1892) 18 VLR 114. 132. (1853) 23 LJ (NS) Ex 36. 133. (1853) 23 LJ (NS) Ex 36 at 37. But see Pitt v PHH Asset Management Ltd [1994] 1 WLR 327 at 332. 134. See generally [6-50]–[6-55]. 135. See J M Adams, ‘Consideration for Requirements Contracts’ (1978) 94 LQR 73. 136. See, eg Dominion Coal Co Ltd v Dominion Iron & Steel Co Ltd [1909] AC 293. 137. Metropolitan Electric Supply Co Ltd v Ginder [1901] 2 Ch 799. Such a contract may be invalid under the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), s 47. 138. Donnell v Bennett (1883) 22 Ch D 835. 139. See British Empire Films Pty Ltd v Oxford Theatres Pty Ltd [1943] VLR 163. 140. See J W Carter, ‘The Renegotiation of Contracts’ (1998) 13 JCL 185 (and commentary thereon by S M Waddams (1998) 13 JCL 199; M P Furmston (1998) 13 JCL 210).
141. See generally on variation [7-24], [7-25]. 142. But see Brian Coote, ‘Variations Sans Consideration’ (2011) 27 JCL 185. 143. (1973) 47 ALJR 586; 1 ALR 487. 144. (1973) 47 ALJR 586 at 594. Walsh J agreed. 145. See [6-43], [6-45]–[6-55], [6-58]–[6-60]. 146. (1831) 1 B & Ad 950; 109 ER 1040. 147. Brown v Brine (1875) LR 1 Ex 5. Cf [6-39]. 148. [1956] 2 All ER 318. 149. It might have been possible to find consideration in an implied promise by the mother not to bring affiliation proceedings against the father but for the fact that her evidence was that she had not at any time intended to bring such proceedings and that it was too late for her to bring them once she ceased to be a single woman. 150. [1956] 2 All ER 318 at 319. 151. [1957] 1 WLR 148. 152. [1957] 1 WLR 148 at 151. 153. [1959] VR 197. 154. [1925] AC 270. See also Sheahan v Workers Rehabilitation and Compensation Corp (1991) 101 ALR 431 at 440–1. 155. (1809) 2 Camp 317; 170 ER 1168. 156. (1809) 2 Camp 317; 170 ER 1168 (see [6-44]). 157. (1857) 7 El & Bl 872; 119 ER 1471. See also Dunton v Dunton (1892) 18 VLR 114; North Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v Hyundai Construction Co Ltd (The Atlantic Baron) [1979] QB 705; Syros Shipping Co SA v Elaghill Trading Co (The Proodos C) [1981] 3 All ER 189. 158. (1940) 40 SR (NSW) 365 at 368. 159. See further [6-50]–[6-55], [7-24]. 160. But cf Concut Pty Ltd v Worrell (2000) 176 ALR 693 (HC) (see J W Carter and Andrew Stewart (2001) 17 JCL 181). 161. See J W Carter, Andrew Phang and Jill Poole, ‘Reactions to Williams v Roffey’ (1995) 8 JCL 248; Andrew Phang, ‘Acceptance by Silence and Consideration Reined In’ [1994] LMCLQ 336; Mindy Chen-Wishart, ‘Consideration: Practical Benefit and the Emperor’s New Clothes’ in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995, p 123; Coote, Contract as Assumption: Essays on a Theme, 2010, chs 3, 4. 162. [1991] 1 QB 1. See Brian Coote, ‘Consideration and Benefit in Fact and in Law’ (1990) 3 JCL 23; John Adams and Roger Brownsword (1990) 53 MLR 536; Andrew Phang (1991) 107 LQR 21. 163. See [6-47]. Similarly, estoppel was not discussed because the point had not been raised at the trial. 164. [1991] 1 QB 1 at 15–16. 165. [1991] 1 QB 1 at 19. 166. [1991] 1 QB 1 at 22. 167. See Brian Coote, ‘Consideration and Benefit in Fact and in Law’ (1990) 3 JCL 23, and note his analysis (at 27–8) of the case from the unilateral contract perspective. 168. See further [6-64].
169. See [6-11], [6-18], [6-41]. Cf Woolworths Ltd v Kelly (1991) 22 NSWLR 189 at 204. 170. (1994) 34 NSWLR 723. Cf Director of Public Prosecutions (Vic) v Le (2007) 240 ALR 204 at 216; [2007] HCA 52 at [43]; Dome Resources NL v Silver (2008) 72 NSWLR 693 at 711; [2008] NSWCA 322 at [68]. 171. (1860) 9 CBNS 159; 142 ER 62. 172. (1860) 9 CBNS 159 at 174; 142 ER 62 at 68. 173. See also Scotson v Pegg (1861) 6 H & N 295; 158 ER 121; Chichester v Cobb (1866) 14 LT 433. 174. [1975] AC 154. See further on the case [16-25]. 175. [1975] AC 154 at 168. See also Port Jackson Stevedoring Pty Ltd v Salmond & Spraggon (Aust) Pty Ltd (The New York Star) (1978) 139 CLR 231 at 243–4; 18 ALR 333 (adopted (1980) 144 CLR 300; 30 ALR 588 (PC)). 176. [1980] AC 614. 177. [1980] AC 614 at 632. 178. Cf S J Stoljar, ‘The Consideration of Forbearance’ (1965) 5 MULR 34. 179. (1973) 47 ALJR 586. 180. (1973) 47 ALJR 586 at 594–5. 181. See, eg Callisher v Bischoffsheim (1870) LR 5 QB 449; Miles v New Zealand Alford Estate Co (1886) 32 Ch D 266; McDermott v Black (1940) 63 CLR 161; Wigan v Edwards (1973) 1 ALR 497; 47 ALJR 586. 182. In some cases it will be found that the plaintiff furnished valuable consideration, if not by surrendering a claim of right, then by delivering up into the possession of the defendant a document which creates or supports the existence of that right and which it was in the defendant’s interests to have. See Haigh v Brooks (1839) 10 Ad & E 309; 113 ER 119; Veitch v Sinclair [1975] 1 NZLR 264. 183. See [6-50]. 184. See, eg Callisher v Bischoffsheim (1870) LR 5 QB 449; Spies v Commonwealth Bank of Australia (1991) 24 NSWLR 691 at 698. 185. See Butler v Fairclough (1917) 23 CLR 78 at 96 and further [6-52]. 186. See, eg Larkin v Girvan (1940) 40 SR (NSW) 365; Hercules Motors Pty Ltd v Schubert (1953) 53 SR (NSW) 301; Ballantyne v Phillott (1961) 105 CLR 379; Syros Shipping Co SA v Elaghill Trading Co (The Proodos C) [1981] 3 All ER 189 at 192; Woolworths Ltd v Kelly (1991) 22 NSWLR 189. 187. Butler v Fairclough (1917) 23 CLR 78 at 96. 188. Miles v New Zealand Alford Estate Co (1886) 32 Ch D 266 at 283 per Cotton LJ. 189. (1961) 105 CLR 379 at 390. 190. Cf Baltic Shipping Co v Merchant ‘Mikhail Lermontov’ (1994) 36 NSWLR 361 at 371. 191. (1886) 32 Ch D 266. 192. (1886) 32 Ch D 266 at 291–2. The views of Cotton LJ and Fry LJ on this question (see at 283–4, 297–8) were less clear though not contradictory to that of Bowen LJ. 193. (1973) 47 ALJR 586. 194. In Cook v Wright (1861) 1 B & S 559 at 569; 121 ER 822 at 826 the asserted claim was referred to as ‘a reasonable claim on one side which it was bona fide intended to pursue’. See also General Credits Ltd v Ebsworth [1986] 2 Qd R 162.
195. Cf Nissho Iwai (Australia) Ltd v Oskar [1984] WAR 53. For the relevance of knowledge in an ‘all claims’ release see Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA v Ali [2002] 1 AC 251. 196. (1940) 63 CLR 161. 197. (1940) 63 CLR 161 at 183–5. 198. And note Simon Currie, ‘Accord and Satisfaction by Way of Full Settlement Cheque’ (2011) 27 JCL 119. 199. [1985] 1 WLR 925 at 933. Whether the claimant’s cause of action remains intact is a separate question. 200. Butler v Fairclough (1917) 23 CLR 78 at 96. 201. Payne v Wilson (1827) 7 B & C 423; 108 ER 781; Oldershaw v King (1857) 2 H & N 517; 157 ER 213. 202. Alliance Bank v Broom (1864) 2 Dr & Sm 289 at 292; 62 ER 631 at 632–3. 203. See Larkin v Girvan (1940) 40 SR (NSW) 365 (arbitration). 204. See Boettcher v Boettcher [1948] Qd St R 73; Griffiths v Knight [1960] SR (NSW) 353. 205. Butler v Fairclough (1917) 23 CLR 78 at 96. 206. Crears v Hunter (1887) 19 QBD 341; Newton v State Government Insurance Office (Qld) [1986] 1 Qd R 431 at 444. 207. See Murphy v Timms [1987] 2 Qd R 550. 208. See, eg Alliance Bank v Broom (1864) 2 Dr & Sm 289; 62 ER 631. 209. Anon (1455) YB 33 Henry VI f 48 pl 32; Anon (1495) YB 10 Henry VII f 4 pl 4. 210. (1602) 5 Co Rep 117a; 77 ER 237. See also Richards v Bartlet (1584) 1 Leon 19; 74 ER 17; Goring v Goring (1602) Yelv 11; 80 ER 8. 211. (1721) 1 Stra 426; 93 ER 613. 212. (1602) 5 Co Rep 117a; 77 ER 237. 213. (1721) 1 Stra 426; 93 ER 613. 214. (1884) 9 App Cas 605. See Janet O’Sullivan, ‘In Defence of Foakes v Beer’ [1996] CLJ 219. 215. See generally [6-12]. 216. See [6-50]–[6-55]. 217. (1602) 5 Co Rep 117a; 77 ER 237 (see [6-56]). 218. Welby v Drake (1825) 1 C & P 557; 171 ER 1315; Cook v Lister (1863) 13 CB (NS) 543 at 595; 143 ER 215 at 235–6; Hirachand Punamchand v Temple [1911] 2 KB 330. 219. Boothbey v Sowden (1812) 3 Camp 175; 170 ER 1346; Good v Cheeseman (1831) 2 B & Ad 328; 109 ER 1165. 220. See generally Chapter 16. 221. See, eg Re Burns; Ex parte National Mutual Life Association of Australasia Ltd (1992) 117 ALR 174. 222. (1967) 119 CLR 460 (see [6-22]). 223. See Cook v Lister (1863) 13 CBNS 543 at 595; 143 ER 215 at 235. Cf Couldery v Bartrum (1881) 19 Ch D 394; Hirachand Punamchand v Temple [1911] 2 KB 330; Re Pearse [1905] VLR 446; E T Fisher Pty Ltd v English Scottish & Australian Bank Ltd (1940) 64 CLR 84. 224. See Estate of Whitehead (dec’d) (1986) 44 SASR 402 at 406.
225. Sixth Interim Report, Cmd 5449, 1937, para 26. 226. See further [6-64]. 227. See [7-01]–[7-23]. 228. Cf Samuel Stoljar, ‘Bargain and Non-bargain Promises’ (1988) 18 UWALR 119. 229. See [1-13]. 230. See further [7-23] (promissory estoppel). 231. But cf Samuel Stoljar, ‘Estoppel and Contract Theory’ (1990) 3 JCL 1. 232. [1956] 2 All ER 318 (see [6-42]). 233. [1956] 2 All ER 318 at 319. 234. See [6-64]. 235. As in Pao On v Lau Yiu Long [1980] AC 614. 236. See further [6-63]. 237. Arguably this would be a return to what may have been the original approach, see [6-45]. 238. See generally on public policy [25-19]–[25-33], [26-01]–[26-20]. 239. See generally Chapter 22. 240. See Pao On v Lau Yiu Long [1980] AC 614 at 634–5. 241. (1884) 9 App Cas 605. 242. (1884) 9 App Cas 605 at 622. 243. (1602) 5 Co Rep 117a; 77 ER 237. 244. [1975] AC 154 (see [6-49]). See also General Accident Fire and Life Assurance Corp v Tanter (The Zephyr) [1985] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 529 at 538.
[page 151]
Chapter 7
Promises Supported by Estoppel [7-01] Impact of estoppel. Criticism of the consideration requirement must be made with an appreciation of what has been happening, particularly in recent years, under the guise of estoppel.1 To say that a person is ‘estopped’ is to say that a person is ‘precluded’. Estoppel therefore refers to situations where a person is precluded from saying something. That ‘something’ varies, but it relevantly refers to the denial that a promise was made. Many of the possible injustices of consideration have been averted by use of estoppel. For example, in D & C Builders Ltd v Rees2 Lord Denning MR expressed the view3 that the principle of promissory estoppel: has been applied to cases where a creditor agrees to accept a lesser sum in discharge of a greater. So much so that we can now say that, when a creditor and a debtor enter upon a course of negotiation, which leads the debtor to suppose that, on payment of the lesser sum, the creditor will not enforce payment of the balance, and on the faith thereof the debtor pays the lesser sum and the creditor accepts it as satisfaction: then the creditor will not be allowed to enforce payment of the balance when it would be inequitable to do so …
Whether this statement is a perfectly accurate assessment of the law may be debated,4 but it is nevertheless clear that all the rules on consideration must be taken with a very large grain of estoppel-flavoured salt.
Estoppel Generally [7-02] Forms of estoppel. If the terminology is taken seriously there is a veritable smorgasbord of concepts to choose from under the heading of [page 152] estoppel. References may be found to common law estoppel, estoppel in pais,
estoppel by representation, estoppel by convention, equitable estoppel, promissory estoppel, High Trees estoppel, proprietary estoppel, estoppel by acquiescence, estoppel of record and issue estoppel. Some of these — the list is not exhaustive — such as ‘issue estoppel’ have nothing to do with consideration. If ever these expressions were intended to describe distinct types of estoppel, they do not do so today. Clearly, some are merely alternative descriptions of the same thing, and many may be grouped together by reference to a unifying concept of unconscionability.5 The broad traditional division is between common law estoppels, based on representations of fact, and equitable versions relying on promises or assurances. However, even this division must now be regarded as of doubtful validity. [7-03] Object of estoppel. In Thompson v Palmer6 Dixon J explained that the object of estoppel ‘is to prevent an unjust departure by one person from an assumption adopted by another as the basis of some act or omission which, unless the assumption be adhered to, would operate to that other’s detriment’. In Grundt v Great Boulder Pty Gold Mines Ltd7 he explained the meaning of this in these terms:8 This means that the real detriment or harm from which the law seeks to give protection is that which would flow from the change of position if the assumption were deserted that led to it.
There is therefore a contrast between the object of estoppel and the object of consideration. The purpose of the concept of consideration is to mark off those promises the breach of which gives rise to contractual remedies. The purpose of the concept of estoppel is to prevent unjust departures from justified assumptions. It follows that estoppel does operate as a substitute for consideration. The purpose is not to make promises or representations binding in the same way as contracts. [7-04] Protection of reliance. Promises supported by consideration are enforceable as contracts. But if consideration is absent a person is generally free to retract a promise. To that extent there is a ‘right’ not to honour a promise which has not been purchased. That is qualified by the concept of estoppel. But there must be something more than the promise. A significant feature of estoppel is that, to a greater extent than is allowed for under the bargain theory of consideration,9 it protects a person from the injurious consequences of reliance. In Thompson v Palmer10 Dixon J said:11 Whether a departure by a party from the assumption should be considered unjust and inadmissible depends on the part taken by him in occasioning its adoption by the other party. He … is not bound to adhere to the assumption unless, as a result of adopting it as the basis of action or inaction, the other
[page 153] party will have placed himself in a position of material disadvantage if departure from the assumption be permitted.
A few years later, in Grundt v Great Boulder Pty Gold Mines Ltd,12 Dixon J said13 that the party who has adopted the assumption ‘must have so acted or abstained from acting upon the footing of the state of affairs assumed that he would suffer a detriment if the opposite party were afterwards allowed to set up rights against him inconsistent with the assumption’. Accordingly, in addition to the promise and the assumption made by the person to whom it is addressed, the law requires reliance. But even reliance is not necessarily sufficient to bind the representor or promisor’s conscience. There must be an element of injustice or unconscionability. In other words, in seeking to go back on the promise, the party against whom estoppel is alleged must be found to have behaved unconscionably. [7-05] Unconscionability. The recent authorities have tended to unify the various types of estoppel and to insist that the doctrine should not be seen as a ‘series of independent rules’.14 It is clear that, in this unification or rationalisation, a key component is ‘unconscionability’. That is to say, a person will be estopped only (assuming other criteria to be satisfied) if it would be unconscionable to depart from the assumption relied upon by the other party.15 Indeed, the clear trend of the authorities is to treat unconscionability as the touchstone for all relevant forms of estoppel.16 [7-06] Relevance. Our main concern is with gratuitous promises, and the extent to which estoppel is a means of enforcing such promises. Because of this, the discussion concentrates on promissory estoppel. We need to consider the circumstances which give rise to an estoppel and the relation between estoppel and promises supported by consideration. Recalling the idea that estoppel refers to the inability to deny something, we are concerned with the inability to deny that a promise was made even though the promise is not actually supported by consideration. Of course, merely saying that a person may be precluded from denying that a promise was made does not take us very far. We also need to know how far the estoppel extends, that is, the extent to which it is binding. That raises the question of rights and remedies. Here a word of caution is necessary. It is misleading, and generally wrong, to say that a promise binding by virtue of
estoppel has the same effect as a promise binding [page 154] because it is supported by consideration. Further guidance can be gained from two contrasting perspectives. First, a promise may be made in the context of a pre-existing legal relationship, such as a contractual relationship. The issue may then arise whether the person who made the promise is estopped (precluded) from setting up a right arising from that relationship. Generally, estoppel is given a sufficient operation merely by regarding the promise as a valid defence to the assertion of the right which arose from the relationship. Second, a promise may be made in a situation where there is no pre-existing legal relationship. A holding of estoppel is likely to be much more controversial, since the effect may be to preclude the promisor from asserting that no rights arose from the promise. By definition there is no consideration, and so the direct enforcement of the promise results in the promisee acquiring rights which would not otherwise exist. To allow the promisee to treat the promise as fully binding tends to contradict the consideration requirement. Yet this is, on occasion, the practical result. It follows from this that another way of expressing the two perspectives is to say that estoppel may be ‘defensive’ or ‘offensive’. In its former guise estoppel is sometimes described as a rule of evidence.17 That is to say, the operation of estoppel is not so much to create or change rights or obligations as to preclude a party from setting up the rights or obligations which would otherwise govern the parties’ relationship. From the second perspective estoppel may be used more aggressively, to assist in the creation of rights or obligations where none existed before.
Estoppel in the Context of a Pre-existing Legal Relationship [7-07] Introduction. To say that estoppel may operate in the context of a preexisting legal relationship between the person who made a representation,
promise or assurance and the person to whom it was made is not controversial. Notwithstanding our contractual focus, it is clear that the legal relation need not be contractual in character.18 [7-08] The principle in Hughes’s case. Until 1983 there was some doubt as to whether a principle of promissory estoppel was applicable in Australia. In England there was support for a doctrine of promissory estoppel having the effect of precluding a promisor from resiling from a promise, at least without first giving reasonable notice to the other party that the operation of the contract is to be reinstated. A statement in Hughes v Metropolitan Railway Co19 was the origin of this. In a much cited passage, Lord Cairns LC said:20 [page 155] … it is the first principle upon which all Courts of Equity proceed, that if parties who have entered into definite and distinct terms involving certain legal results — certain penalties or legal forfeiture — afterwards by their own act or with their own consent enter upon a course of negotiation which has the effect of leading one of the parties to suppose that the strict rights arising under the contract will not be enforced, or will be kept in suspense, or held in abeyance, the person who otherwise might have enforced those rights will not be allowed to enforce them where it would be inequitable having regard to the dealings which have thus taken place between the parties.
The case was treated by Denning J in Central London Property Trust v High Trees House Ltd21 as authority for the existence of a general principle of estoppel, certainly in equity and perhaps also at common law, which would seem wide enough to embrace, in appropriate circumstances, a promise not to enforce (or a promise to suspend) legal contractual rights. In High Trees the plaintiff leased a block of flats to the defendant under a 99-year lease. The war made the flats difficult for High Trees to let and it was clear that it could not pay the rent out of the profits from lettings. In 1940 the plaintiff agreed to reduce the rent and the reduced rent was paid. In 1945 (by which time the flats were again fully let) the plaintiff asserted that it was entitled to the full rent and brought proceedings to recover the amount of the additional rent for the last two quarters of 1945. Denning J considered that the parties’ intention was that the reduction should continue only as long as the low occupancy rate due to the war continued, with the result that by its own terms the arrangement had ended in early 1945. The defendant was therefore liable to pay the amount of the original rent thereafter. More importantly for present purposes, Denning J considered that if the plaintiff had sued for the rent forgone from 1940 to 1945, it would not have been able to go back on its promise. He said:22
The courts have not gone so far as to give a cause of action in damages for the breach of such a promise, but they have refused to allow the party making it to act inconsistently with it. It is in that sense, and that sense only, that such a promise gives rise to an estoppel.
That an estoppel could arise out of a promised suspension of contractual rights was accepted by the House of Lords in Tool Metal Manufacturing Co Ltd v Tungsten Electric Co Ltd23 and the Privy Council in Ajayi v R T Briscoe (Nigeria) Ltd.24 [7-09] Recognition in Australia. Although it was not until 1983, when the High Court decided Legione v Hateley,25 that promissory estoppel was authoritatively recognised in Australia, it would be wrong to say that there was no support for the limited form of promissory estoppel recognised in England.26 The importance of Legione v Hateley was the confirmation of the principle at the highest level. [page 156] In Legione v Hateley a contract for the sale of land provided for completion on 1 July 1979. Time for completion was of the essence of the contract. The contract also provided that, in the event of breach, a party was not entitled to enforce rights and remedies without first giving to the other a written notice specifying the default and stating the intention to enforce his rights and remedies unless the default was made good within 14 days. If such a notice was given and not complied with, the contract provided that it was to ‘become rescinded upon the expiry of the period’. The purchasers failed to complete on 1 July 1979 and the vendors duly gave a notice expiring at midnight on 10 August 1979. On 9 August, a member of the firm of solicitors representing the purchasers telephoned the solicitors for the vendors and spoke to a Ms Williams. His evidence was that he told Ms Williams that the purchasers had arranged bridging finance and would be ready to settle on the following Friday, that is, 17 August, and that she replied ‘I think that’ll be all right but I’ll have to get instructions’. On 14 August 1979 the vendors’ solicitors advised the purchasers’ solicitors by letter that the vendors declined to sign the transfer of land as the contract ‘had been rescinded’. They demanded immediate possession of the land. The purchasers contested the validity of the purported rescission and on 15 August tendered payment of the balance purchase price but the tender was rejected. The purchasers sought specific performance in the Supreme Court of Victoria and the vendors counter-claimed for a declaration that they had validly rescinded
the contract. The trial judge found for the vendors. On appeal, the Full Court by majority held that the vendors were estopped from asserting that the contract had been rescinded prior to the tender on 15 August 1979. The vendors appealed to the High Court. In a joint judgment, Gibbs CJ and Murphy J noted that it was not suggested by counsel for the vendors that the Full Court had erred in holding that promissory estoppel was part of the law of Victoria, and proceeded to review the broad basis of the doctrine in the speech of Lord Cairns in Hughes v Metropolitan Railway Co.27 In another joint judgment, Mason and Deane JJ thought28 that there was strong English authority for a limited doctrine of promissory estoppel, albeit ‘restricted to precluding departure from a representation by a person in a pre-existing contractual relationship that he will not enforce his strict contractual rights’. They said:29 The clear trend of recent authorities, the rationale of the general principle underlying estoppel in pais, established equitable principle and the legitimate search for justice and consistency under the law combine to persuade us to conclude that promissory estoppel should be accepted in Australia as applicable between parties in such a relationship.
Gibbs CJ and Murphy J were satisfied as to the existence of those elements necessary to give rise to a promissory estoppel in the context of the case at hand, whereas Mason and Deane JJ (and also Brennan J) [page 157] thought it impossible to read into Ms Williams’s statement any promise or representation to the effect that unless they were advised otherwise, the purchasers could disregard the lapsing of time fixed by the vendors’ notice. Accordingly, on this issue30 the purchasers failed.31
Estoppel Where No Pre-existing Legal Relation [7-10] Introduction. In 1986 the Privy Council suggested in Maharaj v Chand32 that the ‘frontiers’ of promissory estoppel are still being worked out. Although that may well still be true, in the High Court’s landmark decision in Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher33 promissory estoppel was applied where there was no pre-existing contractual relation, and an offensive stance for the doctrine
was effectively recognised in the decision to award damages. The current uncertainty relates to the impact of that decision on estoppel in general and the relationship between promissory estoppel and the doctrine of consideration in particular.34 [7-11] Estoppel and consideration. Estoppel may operate if, at the time when the promisor seeks to go back on a promise, the circumstances are such that it would be unjust, unconscionable or inequitable to allow the promisor to go back on the promise. This operation of estoppel does not depend on the presence of consideration. Such detriment as the promisee may have suffered by reliance on the promise is not a consideration for that promise because, although foreseeable by the promisor, it had not been bargained for. The absence of consideration precludes an ordinary contractual action for damages to enforce the promise. This has often been expressed by saying that estoppel does not create a cause of action where none existed before. Metaphorically, promissory estoppel operates ‘as a shield and not as a sword’.35 Opinions are divided on whether this remains an accurate way of expressing the position. In Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher36 the High Court gave effect to an estoppel by awarding damages. On one view this is the direct enforcement of estoppel as a cause of action. However, the result may be viewed differently, by asserting that once an estoppel has arisen, and the defendant is entitled to some relief, the precise form of relief depends on the way in which the estoppel arises, and the discretion of the court.37 [page 158] [7-12] Promise to complete transaction on agreed terms. In Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher38 Mr and Mrs Maher (the Mahers) negotiated with Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd (Waltons) for the lease by the latter of a commercial property which the Mahers owned in Nowra. After demolishing an old building on the land, the Mahers were to erect a new building by 5 February 1984. On 21 October 1983 a draft agreement for lease was sent to the Mahers’ solicitors. Amendments were discussed and Waltons’ solicitors were informed that the Mahers had begun to demolish the old building. On 7 November Waltons’ solicitors were told that it would be impossible for the new building to be completed on time unless the agreement was completed in the next day or two. As they were also told, the Mahers did not want to demolish a new part of
the old building until it was clear that there were no problems. This conversation proved to be crucial. That same day Waltons’ solicitors sent to the Mahers’ solicitors fresh documents incorporating the amendments agreed on by the solicitors and stating ‘we have not yet obtained our client’s specific instructions to each amendment requested, but we believe that approval will be forthcoming. We shall let you know tomorrow if any amendments are not agreed to’. On 11 November, the documents executed by the Mahers were forwarded to Waltons’ solicitors ‘by way of exchange’, and the Mahers began to demolish the new portion of the old building. Unfortunately, Waltons, who knew what the Mahers were doing, altered its retailing policy. Having received advice that because contracts had not been exchanged it was not bound to proceed, Waltons instructed its solicitors to ‘go slow’. The Mahers commenced construction of the new building which was 40 per cent complete by 19 January 1984 when Waltons informed the Mahers of its intention not to sign the proposed lease. At no time prior to this letter was there any indication that the amendments were unacceptable or that Waltons would not exchange contracts. Notwithstanding the substantial negotiations which had taken place, there was no pre-existing legal relationship between Waltons and the Mahers which would, under earlier views of promissory estoppel, have justified a finding that Waltons was estopped from denying a promise to grant a lease to the Mahers. However, Kearney J awarded the Mahers damages, holding that Waltons was estopped from denying that a concluded contract by way of exchange existed. An appeal to the New South Wales Court of Appeal was dismissed. A further appeal to the High Court was also dismissed.39 A majority of the court40 applied promissory estoppel. In their view there was an implied promise to complete the transaction which Waltons was estopped from denying.41 Mason CJ and Wilson J said:42 [page 159] [T]he doctrine extends to the enforcement of voluntary promises on the footing that a departure from the basic assumptions underlying the transaction between the parties must be unconscionable. As failure to fulfil a promise does not of itself amount to unconscionable conduct, mere reliance on an executory promise to do something, resulting in the promisee changing his position or suffering detriment, does not bring promissory estoppel into play. Something more would be required. A-G of Hong Kong v Humphreys Estate (Queen’s Gardens) Ltd43 suggests that this may be found, if at all, in the creation or encouragement by the party estopped in the other party of an assumption that a contract will come into existence or a promise will be performed and that the other party relied on that
assumption to his detriment to the knowledge of the first party.
Deane J and Gaudron J (like the Court of Appeal) based their decisions on common law estoppel. Thus, Deane J thought that Waltons was bound to adhere to an assumption that a binding contract existed, and Gaudron J held that Waltons was bound by an assumption of fact that contracts had been exchanged. On either view the Mahers were entitled to substantial damages. For the majority the basis was that the Mahers’ reliance on the promise had generated an equity in their favour. That is to say, they had a right to the fulfilment of the promise by Waltons to complete the transaction. Normally this would have been enforced by an order for specific performance. But because specific performance was no longer appropriate,44 they were entitled to damages in lieu of specific performance.45 This was the means by which the assumption of the Mahers was protected and by which Waltons was prevented from engaging in unconscionable conduct.46 For Deane J and Gaudron J, relying on common law estoppel, the basis for the action in damages was breach of the contract which Waltons was estopped from denying.47 [7-13] Promise to grant proprietary interest where terms still to be agreed. Prior to Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher,48 non-contractual promises to grant proprietary interests in land were sometimes enforced, notwithstanding that terms were still to be agreed. Indeed, unlike Waltons v Maher, where a contractual relation was clearly contemplated, it was not crucial for there to be an intention to enter any contractual relation. This form of estoppel was usually referred to as ‘proprietary estoppel’ or ‘estoppel by acquiescence’. Where it applies to such a promise, since the doctrine estops the landowner from denying that the rights or interest exist, an order to transfer or grant as promised may be made.49 A required circumstance is [page 160] ‘detrimental reliance’ by the promisee, and in most cases this has taken the form of effecting improvements on the promisor’s land. Thus, a landowner’s promise that another has or shall have the land or an interest in it, although not supported by consideration and therefore not enforceable contractually, may, with other circumstances, activate the doctrine of proprietary estoppel.50 In Austotel Pty Ltd v Franklins Selfserve Pty Ltd51 a letter of intent was given
by Franklins to enter into a lease for the purpose of opening a supermarket in Mosman (Sydney). For two reasons this did not constitute a contract. First, Franklins said on a number of occasions that entry into a formal contract would have to wait until other projects were completed. Franklins did, however, say that it would honour the letter of intent save in ‘extenuating circumstances’. Second, there was an increase in the floor area for the supermarket so that the rent for the lease was never agreed. Austotel was under pressure from its financiers to provide evidence of commitment on the part of Franklins. This was given in the form of letters from Franklins to the financiers. One actually said that Franklins had entered into a lease. Ultimately, however, Austotel discontinued negotiations with Franklins and leased the supermarket to another party. Franklins sought an order for the grant of a lease by Austotel. Although no formal lease was signed, Franklins did incur substantial costs and had communicated commercially significant information to Austotel about the setting up of a supermarket. The main argument put forward by Franklins, based on promissory estoppel, was rejected by a majority of the court. Kirby P emphasised the relative equality in bargaining positions of the parties and said52 that the court should be slow to allow promissory estoppel to operate in clear contradiction to the intention of the parties. Franklins consciously refrained from entering into the lease for good commercial reasons, but it misjudged the hold which it had over Austotel. Similarly, Rogers AJA said that for Franklins to succeed it was necessary that an ‘equity’ in its favour had arisen from the combination of encouragement that a lease would be entered into, and Austotel standing by while expenditure was incurred. But, in his view, it was clear that Franklins had intentionally refrained from entering into the lease and from discussing the price element which proved to be crucial. It was simply impossible, in his view, to identify an assumption on the basis of which Franklins was encouraged to proceed. He [page 161] said53 Franklins had made a ‘deliberate gamble’ that the contract would not materialise. Priestley JA would have held in favour of Franklins. He pointed to a difference between the estoppel found in Waltons v Maher, where there is no dispute about the terms of the agreement, but the terms of the agreement are not
enforceable, and the present case, where the plaintiff sought relief of a proprietary kind even though there was no agreement on terms. As is explained above, typical of the latter type of estoppel is the encouragement by the defendant that the plaintiff spend money on the defendant’s property in the belief that an interest in that property will be obtained by contract. Priestley JA said that analysis in a series of recent English cases,54 approved by the Privy Council in A-G (Hong Kong) v Humphreys Estate (Queen’s Gardens) Ltd,55 if applicable in Australia, would justify the expansion of the scope of promissory estoppel as stated in Waltons v Maher. He expressed the principle as follows:56 For equitable estoppel to operate there must be the creation or encouragement by the defendant in the plaintiff of an assumption that a contract will come into existence or a promise be performed or an interest granted to the plaintiff by the defendant, and reliance on that by the plaintiff, in circumstances where departure from the assumption by the defendant would be unconscionable.
The granting of a proprietary interest in the defendant’s land is then seen merely as the most appropriate way of giving effect to the equity raised by promissory estoppel. Kirby P agreed with this analysis. But Priestley JA dissented in its application to the facts by concluding that although Franklins was not ‘finally committed in a legal sense’, it was as a matter of practicality bound to proceed. Austotel had represented that it was unconditionally bound to grant a lease and Franklins relied to its disadvantage to an extent where it was unconscionable for Austotel to be permitted to deny the promise to grant the lease. While this analysis still awaits express approval by the High Court, it is consistent with that court’s attempts to consolidate the various forms of estoppel by means of the unconscionability concept.57
Elements of Promissory Estoppel [7-14] Introduction. Although, given the flexibility and indeed the wide-ranging nature of the concept, it is difficult to isolate particular elements as essential to promissory estoppel, it is important to make some attempt at [page 162] this process. In Ajayi v R T Briscoe (Nigeria) Ltd58 the Privy Council explained59 the principle that if one party to a contract agrees without fresh
consideration ‘not to enforce his rights an equity will be raised in favour of the other party’. It continued:60 This equity is, however, subject to the qualifications (1) that the other party has altered his position, (2) that the promisor can resile from his promise on giving reasonable notice which need not be a formal notice, giving the promisee a reasonable opportunity of resuming his position, (3) the promise only becomes final and irrevocable if the promisee cannot resume his position.
In Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher61 Brennan J said:62 In my opinion, to establish an equitable estoppel, it is necessary for a plaintiff to prove that (1) the plaintiff assumed that a particular legal relationship then existed between the plaintiff and the defendant or expected that a particular legal relationship would exist between them and, in the latter case, that the defendant would not be free to withdraw from the expected legal relationship; (2) the defendant has induced the plaintiff to adopt that assumption or expectation; (3) the plaintiff acts or abstains from acting in reliance on the assumption or expectation; (4) the defendant knew or intended him to do so; (5) the plaintiff’s action or inaction will occasion detriment if the assumption or expectation is not fulfilled; and (6) the defendant has failed to act to avoid that detriment whether by fulfilling the assumption or expectation or otherwise.
Brennan J’s formulation has been referred to in several subsequent cases, without disapproval.63 However, it has not been approved by the High Court, and it may be that element (1) places undue emphasis on the need for an assumption or expectation that a particular legal relationship existed or would exist.64 [7-15] Promise may be express or implied. It is clear from Legione v Hateley,65 and many other cases,66 that the promise relied upon must be unequivocal, or clear and unambiguous. However, as was pointed out in that case, the promise may be implied: it need not be expressly made. Nevertheless, words which are unclear or equivocal will not usually be a sufficient basis from which to imply a promise giving rise to a case of promissory estoppel.67 [page 163] Traditionally, the courts have been reluctant to treat silence as a promise.68 But in appropriate cases silence may amount to a promise.69 This was in fact the position in Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher,70 where silence on the part of Waltons was regarded as implying a promise to complete the transaction. [7-16] Reliance and detriment. One form of consideration is the incurring of a detriment. But in the typical context in which promissory estoppel is relied upon there will be only acquiescence by the promisee, and any change of position will have occurred collaterally. It will not have been bargained for by the promisor.
Such a change of position will therefore not suffice as the consideration necessary to make the promise binding as a contract. Nevertheless, once reliance is established, particularly definite and substantial reliance, the need to protect the promisee from retraction of the promise will become apparent. In Giumelli v Giumelli71 Gleeson CJ, McHugh, Gummow and Callinan JJ adopted the reasoning of McPherson J in Riches v Hogben,72 including the statement that ‘it is not the existence of an unperformed promise that invites the intervention of equity but the conduct of the plaintiff in acting upon the expectation to which it gives rise’. Je Maintiendrai Pty Ltd v Quaglia73 illustrates the difficulty inherent in the concept or concepts indicated by such expressions as ‘detriment’, ‘material disadvantage’ and ‘action in reliance’. A lessor agreed at the lessee’s request, but without consideration, to accept a reduced rent for an indefinite period. About 18 months later the lessor claimed and sued for the arrears of the full rent. King CJ thought it clear that there could be no estoppel unless the promisee had altered his or her position on the faith of the promise and saw no valid distinction in this respect between estoppel by representation of fact and promissory estoppel. Thus, he did not accept the view, which Lord Denning MR expressed in W J Alan & Co Ltd v El Nasr Export & Import Co,74 that it sufficed that the promisee had ‘acted upon the promise’, detriment being unnecessary. King CJ saw as necessary that resiling from the promise would ‘result in some detriment and therefore some injustice’ to the other party.75 He was not prepared to disturb the finding of the trial judge that there was detriment to the lessee by virtue of the accumulation of arrears of rent of the magnitude concerned. White J, also accepting that detriment was an essential element of promissory estoppel, found it in the lessee’s continuing to pay rent, albeit a reduced rent, and electing to continue to be liable as lessee. Cox J dissented [page 164] precisely on the ground that he could not find on the evidence that detriment had been established. In Legione v Hateley76 Mason and Deane JJ held77 it to be an essential element that the promisee must have adopted the promise ‘as the basis of action or inaction’, and thus be placed ‘in a position of material disadvantage’ if the promisor were allowed to withdraw the promised indulgence without notice.
[7-17] Unconscionability. Consistently with the doctrine’s origins in equity, relief on the basis of promissory estoppel is in the nature of discretionary equitable relief against the operation of the common law. Relief will be granted in favour of a promisee only if it would be unconscionable for the promisor to go back on the promise. Unconscionability is therefore the ‘driving force’ behind promissory estoppel.78 In Legione v Hateley79 the purchasers had sufficient funds to complete when the extension of time expired, and so missed the chance of completing by that time. That provided an element of detriment which would have made it unconscionable for the vendor to depart from the promise, had it been unequivocally made. Whether it would have been present if the purchasers had not had sufficient funds by that time, and the vendor (while the period of the extension was running) had purported to terminate, is open to considerable doubt. Relief will not be granted if the promisee is not acting in good conscience. This is illustrated by the judgment of Lord Denning MR in D & C Builders Ltd v Rees.80 A debtor’s wife, as agent of the debtor, knowing that the creditor was in financial trouble, offered payment of a proportion of the debt in full satisfaction, insisting that if this was not accepted, nothing would be paid. The creditor agreed, and was paid accordingly. Subsequently, it sued for the residue. While Wynn LJ held for the creditor on the ground of lack of consideration, Lord Denning MR and Danckwerts LJ held in its favour on the ground that the wife’s undue pressure on the creditor prevented that true accord which would be necessary before equity would interfere with the creditor’s exercise of its legal rights. Lord Denning MR’s view was that a creditor would normally be estopped in equity by a promise to accept payment from the debtor of a lesser sum in satisfaction of a larger debt where both creditor and debtor had acted on it, but that this was so only where it would be ‘inequitable’ for the creditor to insist on his or her legal rights.81 In the instant case there was inequitable conduct by or on behalf of the debtor in the form of pressure applied to the creditor in exploitation of the creditor’s desperate financial position at the time. [page 165] [7-18] Representations of fact. Prior to the decision of the House of Lords in Jorden v Money82 there was ample authority for the existence of a principle, operative at common law as well as in equity, of estoppel arising from a representation of existing fact, which representation it was reasonable to expect
would be acted upon by the representee. The object of relief was to make good the representation by holding the representor to the assumption.83 But in Jorden v Money the holding of Lord Cranworth LC and Lord Brougham was that the established doctrine of estoppel by representation was confined in its operation to representations of fact and did not extend to representations of intention as to the future or to promises. And in Maddison v Alderson84 the House confirmed85 that Jorden v Money had decided ‘that the doctrine of estoppel by representation is applicable only to representations as to some state of facts alleged to be at the time actually in existence, and not to promises de futuro, which, if binding at all, must be binding as contracts’. The High Court was content in Legione v Hateley86 to confine this line of authority to representations of fact. It could not be treated as denying the possibility of promissory estoppel operating to preclude reliance on contractual rights. At the same time, the court was sceptical not only of the distinction, but also of the need for a pre-existing legal relationship. Following hints in Foran v Wight87 that Jorden v Money might not be followed in Australia, it is arguable that the High Court held in Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen88 that an ‘estoppel, whether common law or equitable, may be founded on a future as well as a present fact’.89 It is also clear that a promise which is not supported by consideration may, in limited cases, be given effect and enforced in the same way as a representation of fact is enforced in cases of estoppel.90 The safeguards for the doctrine of consideration are two-fold. First, the moulding of the remedy to suit the circumstances;91 and, second, the insistence on unconscionable conduct. [page 166]
Operation of the Doctrine — Remedies [7-19] Generally. The remedy granted in the context of promissory estoppel will be proportionate to the detriment suffered by the promisee in reliance on the representation, promise or assurance. However, the detriment may be interpreted in more than one way.92 In broad terms, a choice is to be made between two perspectives on relief. First, it may be appropriate to permit the promisor to resile from the representation or promise. In such a case the operation of estoppel means that the
promisee is granted a remedy (usually the award of a money sum) proportionate to the actual detriment suffered by reason of its reliance. Second, it may be appropriate to hold the promisor to the assumption generated by the promise. In such a case the operation of estoppel means that the promisee is granted relief equivalent to enforcement of the promise. Once the basis for relief has been decided it is necessary to consider the form of relief. The overriding concern is again to ensure that the relief is appropriate relief. In Giumelli v Giumelli93 an estoppel was based on a promise to confer an interest in land on which the plaintiff had built. The question of relief then arose. Was the plaintiff entitled to receive a transfer of an interest in the land, or did equity merely require an order for money payment? The plaintiff had given up a particular career path in order to improve the property. In the view of Gleeson CJ, McHugh, Gummow and Callinan JJ94 an order for payment of a money sum was more appropriate than one for the transfer of title. Nevertheless, the sum was to be assessed by reference to the value of the property in question rather than the loss of income which the plaintiff suffered by relying on the promise, and secured by an equitable charge. [7-20] Suspension and termination of the promisor’s rights. One operation of the doctrine of promissory estoppel is to suspend the promisor’s rights. This is illustrated by cases such as Central London Property Trust v High Trees House Ltd95 and was the point at issue in Legione v Hateley.96 Promissory estoppel may achieve a termination of rights. However, estoppel is permanent only where (1) a permanent abrogation has been promised; and (2) such detriment has been suffered as to make it impossible for the promisee to resume his or her position. [7-21] Enforcement of an equity. One approach to remedies in the context of promissory estoppel is to say that the court should enforce the equity which arises from reliance by the promisee on the promise. There [page 167] are many cases which extol the virtues of equitable relief and its flexibility in moulding the remedy to suit the needs of the case.97 Under this approach, the court will determine the minimum equity and such relief as is necessary to protect the promisee.98 Thus, one explanation of Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd
v Maher99 is the enforcement of an ‘equity’ generated by the promisee’s reliance on the implied promise. An order for damages may be made, but only if that is necessary for giving effect to the equity.100 Taken to its ultimate conclusion, the approach suggests that a promise founding a promissory estoppel is never directly enforced.101 Rather, it is the promisee’s equity which is enforced.102 Although this assists in keeping the operation of promissory estoppel distinct from the enforcement of contractual promises supported by consideration, it does make the law more complex, and is arguably fictional, since the reality is that a promise which is not supported by consideration forms the basis for the promisee’s claim in damages. In Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen103 Mason CJ said that promissory estoppel has ‘undermined the idea that voluntary promises cannot be enforced in the absence of consideration’. It is nevertheless clear, not only that the courts have not resumed the approach104 taken in the 18th century of ‘making representations good’,105 but also that where promises are in effect enforced, the remedy is not necessarily equivalent to that available for breach of a contractual promise. It will be explained later106 that the usual method of calculating damages for breach of contract is to place the promisee in the position which it would have occupied had the promise been performed. However, this is not necessarily the proper approach to promises not supported by consideration but given effect to under promissory estoppel. In this regard Waltons v Maher must be regarded as exceptional, since an expectation method of assessment was there adopted. Often, in responding to reliance, the appropriate way of enforcing the promise is by a restorative award for reliance loss. Thus, if A makes a promise to B, and B relies on the promise [page 168] by expending money, it may only be appropriate to award B the money spent.107 Similarly, if B relies on the promise by providing services, the reasonable value of the services rendered should be awarded. Awarding B expectation damages for A’s nonperformance of the promise, while in some cases necessary, cannot be supported as a general rule because that would be inconsistent with the general acceptance consideration as a requirement for the direct enforcement of promises.
[7-22] Giving effect to the assumption. In Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen108 Deane J developed the view that there is one doctrine of estoppel based on the prevention of departures from assumptions generated by promises or representations. In his view, whether arising from a promise or a representation of fact, the object of estoppel is to give effect to the assumption. Therefore, if A represents, or promises, that a contractual relation exists, or will exist, between A and B (the person to whom the promise or representation was made) and the requirements of estoppel are satisfied, the court must give effect to the assumption and treat A as contractually bound to B or bound to enter into the contract with B. Dawson J adopted a similar approach.109 [7-23] The American doctrine. American law has, for a considerable period of time, countenanced a cause of action based on promissory estoppel.110 In the Californian case, Drennan v Star Paving Co,111 the plaintiff general contractor relied on the defendant paving subcontractor’s bid (the lowest received by the plaintiff) in calculating the amount of his own bid, which was accompanied by a nomination of the defendant for the paving work. The plaintiff’s bid was the lowest and he was awarded the contract. The defendant refused to do the paving work, asserting that it had made a mistake in its bid and that it could not do the work for the amount of its bid. The plaintiff had to engage another contractor to do the paving work at a price exceeding the amount of the defendant’s bid. He succeeded in an action for damages in the amount of the excess. At that time §90 of the Restatement of Contracts (1932) stated: A promise which the promisor should reasonably expect to induce action or forbearance of a definite and substantial character on the part of the promisee and which does induce such action or forbearance is binding if injustice can be avoided only by enforcement of the promise.
The court thought the case analogous to that of a unilateral contract, that is, an offer of a promise to be accepted by action, noting that according to §45 of the Restatement, if part of the consideration requested by the offeror is given or tendered by the offeree in response, the offeror ceases to be free to revoke. Traynor J (for the majority) said:112 [page 169] Whether implied in fact or law, the subsidiary promise serves to preclude the injustice that would result if the offer could be revoked after the offeree had acted in detrimental reliance thereon. Reasonable reliance resulting in a foreseeable prejudicial change in position affords a compelling basis also for implying a subsidiary promise not to revoke an offer for a bilateral contract …
Holding that there was an implied promise not to revoke, the court further held that §90 made it unnecessary to find any consideration for that implied promise and allowed reasonable reliance to make that promise binding. Traynor J said113 that the ‘very purpose of §90 is to make a promise binding even though there was no consideration “in the sense of something that is bargained for and given in exchange”.114 Reasonable reliance serves to hold the offeror in lieu of the consideration ordinarily required to make the offer binding’. Section 90(1) of the Restatement (2d) Contracts (1979) now provides: A promise which the promisor should reasonably expect to induce action or forbearance on the part of the promisee or a third person and which does induce such action or forbearance is binding if injustice can be avoided only by enforcement of the promise. The remedy granted for breach may be limited as justice requires.
Under the first Restatement the action or forbearance had to be of ‘a definite and substantial character’. Thus, the provision is now wider than previously. Moreover, the last sentence of §90(1) has been added to allow a court to mould the remedy as justice requires. This reflects the tendency of American courts115 to adopt a broad and flexible approach to the concept. Under the current §90(1) there must be action or forbearance, but it need not be by the promisee. Thus, a third person who relies on the promisor’s promise may be afforded a remedy. Not only does §90 dispense with the requirement of consideration, it is also opposed to the rule of privity of contract.
Discharge, Variation and Related Concepts Discharge and Variation [7-24] Discharge. Once a contract has been discharged by performance116 there remains no executory undertaking to be discharged. On the other hand, where either or both parties have obligations to perform, the discharge or extinguishment of those obligations (often termed ‘rescission’) by an agreement between the parties necessarily requires consideration. The contract, although arising in the context of a pre-existing contract, is subject to the ordinary requirements of contract law. If executory on both sides, the requirement of consideration to support the
agreement for discharge will ordinarily present no difficulties. [page 170] Consideration is necessarily present if there are mutual releases of the outstanding obligations. For each party’s release, the reciprocal release of the other is consideration.117 However, if a contract remains executory on one side only, even if only to a minor extent, the question whether an agreed discharge or promise of discharge of the executory obligation is supported by consideration presents more difficulty. Clearly, the doctrine of consideration requires that, unless made by deed, such a discharge must be supported by a fresh consideration.118 This is so whether or not the time has arrived for performance. If that time has not yet arrived, the release is of an outstanding primary obligation fixed by the contract, for example, a promise to paint a portrait where payment has been made in advance. If that time has arrived, the release is of the defaulting party’s obligations consequential upon performance or breach, for example, of an indebtedness for the price of goods or services supplied or an obligation to pay damages for breach of contract. In most cases, if consideration is present it will be in the form of a compromise. In other words, the contract to discharge the unperformed part of a contract will arise out of a bona fide dispute in relation to the contract. This area of the law has already been discussed.119 [7-25] Variation. Variation of a subsisting contract is theoretically distinct from an agreement for complete discharge. On any conventional description of the concept of a variation, it does not include an agreement to discharge the contract altogether.120 The same is true where the parties, as well as agreeing to discharge the pre-existing contract, substitute a fresh contract. The second contract cannot be regarded as a mere variation of the first, since the intention is to replace the first, or the outstanding obligations of the parties, with a second contract.121 On the other hand, the agreement may do no more than vary the pre-existing contract, by changing one or more terms (or the obligations created) without actually discharging the contract. For example, the parties to a contract for the sale of goods under which the buyer is required to pay a price of $1000 might agree to increase the price to $1500. Clearly, there must be some consideration
for the buyer’s promise to pay the higher price, as the buyer was contractually entitled to receive the goods for the lesser sum. We have already seen this principle in operation in the context of promises to perform pre-existing duties.122 The orthodox view is that the seller’s promise to deliver the goods cannot itself be consideration for the buyer’s promise to pay the higher price. [page 171] A variation may incipiently involve a potential benefit and a potential detriment to each party. In any such case, consideration is clearly present for each party’s agreement to the variation. An example is a variation in the currency in which money is to be paid under the contract. It is immaterial that, as events transpire, the change to a different currency appears to benefit one party only. So, if in the example above, the buyer had originally agreed to pay $1000 in Australian currency, but later agreed to pay $1000 in United States currency, the later promise is supported by consideration, in the form of the seller’s promise to accept a different currency. However, consideration will not be present where a variation is exclusively for the benefit of one party. Where the nature of a variation may be equivocal, extrinsic evidence may show that it was made for the benefit of one party only. Thus, the suggested consideration for a seller’s granting of an extension of time for payment and the seller’s promise not to serve a bankruptcy notice, might be a change in the place where payment is to be made, but once it is shown that this change was also made for the buyer’s convenience alone, it is disqualified as a consideration.123
Estoppel, Election and Waiver [7-26] Doctrines available. Discharge and variation depend on a bilateral consensus. But a contracting party may, in effect unilaterally, lose rights available under a contract. This is usually explained by reference to the related concepts of ‘estoppel’, ‘election’ and ‘waiver’. Although the precise interrelationship of these concepts is uncertain,124 it is clear that they operate in a way which is distinct from discharge and variation. Generally, whereas consideration is required for discharge or variation, it is not necessary for the operation of concepts such as estoppel, election and waiver.125 Unfortunately,
however, the law is complex, and not characterised by a high degree of coherence or consistency. For present purposes it is sufficient to explain how these concepts operate without the need for consideration.126 In order to highlight these issues, and to avoid detailed anticipation of future discussions, it is proposed to take ‘waiver’ as the focus, although this is the most troublesome concept of all. The looseness with which the term is used is notorious, and this is not the place to examine the concept exhaustively.127 [page 172] [7-27] Waiver meaning election. One sense of the word ‘waiver’ is to describe an election between rights.128 Assume that one party to a contract (the promisee) is entitled to terminate the contract for the promisor’s breach of contract.129 The law does not require that the promisee terminate; the promisee may prefer to ‘affirm’ the obligation to perform the contract, and actually perform or call on the promisor to perform. But termination and affirmation are mutually inconsistent rights and the exercise of one is necessarily a rejection (‘waiver’) of the other.130 Apart from such cases of conscious election between rights, the promisee may engage in conduct which would be justifiable only if an election had been made one way or the other. If so, the alternative right ceases to be available: it is regarded as having been lost in just the same way as if the promisee had consciously (expressly) elected in favour of one right and against the other.131 [7-28] Waiver meaning estoppel. The concept of ‘waiver’ of a right is broad enough to embrace not only the giving up of one right in favour of another but also conduct which makes it unfair, inequitable or unconscionable for the promisee to insist on the right.132 The broad distinction between waiver in the sense of election, and waiver in the sense of estoppel is that while the former focuses on the words and conduct of the promisee, the second focuses more on the reliance by the promisor on what the promisee has said or done.133 Assume that one party to a contract (the promisee) possesses the right to terminate for the breach and also the right to claim damages for the breach. For example, a buyer would be in this position where a seller of goods has not met a delivery date and time of delivery is of the essence.134 The buyer is not obliged to exercise the right of termination, the buyer may request the seller to deliver on
a later (named) date, and the seller might rely on this by making arrangements for the delivery of the goods on that day. If the seller tenders (offers) the goods to the buyer, the buyer is not permitted to reject them on the ground of late delivery. The buyer is regarded as having ‘waived’ the right of termination in the sense that the buyer is precluded (estopped) from relying on the right of termination135 because: (1) it has expressly or impliedly represented that the goods will not be rejected; [page 173] (2) the seller has relied to its detriment on that representation by attempting to deliver the goods; and (3) it would be unjust or unconscionable to permit the buyer to exercise the legal right of termination. Whereas it is an essential ingredient of waiver in the sense of estoppel that the seller should have changed its position in reliance on what the buyer has said,136 this is not an essential element of waiver in the sense of election.137 Similarly, although there is no requirement of unconscionability in the context of election,138 no estoppel will arise in the absence of unconscionable conduct.139 Again, although waiver in the sense of election requires ‘knowledge’ of the circumstances,140 waiver in the sense of estoppel does not require knowledge.141 [7-29] Effect of waiver. What both these forms of waiver have in common is that there is no requirement of consideration. We have seen that estoppel is independent of consideration.142 Waiver in the sense of election does not signify that the promisee has purported to contract out of the right, the position is simply that the promisee has engaged in conduct (which may in some cases be no more than silence) showing that one of the rights available to the promisee has been rejected in favour of another. Thus, although no longer able to choose one of the rights available in respect of the promisor’s breach (termination), the promisee still has the right to claim damages for breach of contract. To conclude that a right has been ‘waived’ might be thought to suggest that the right has been lost. But that is not necessarily the case. In order to determine what precisely is the effect of waiver it is necessary to examine the basis for the conclusion. A ‘waiver’ which is an election between inconsistent rights is final in
the sense that the inconsistent right is permanently lost. On the other hand, a waiver which is an estoppel may involve no more than a temporary suspension of contractual rights.143 Unless it would be inequitable so to allow, the right may be reasserted upon the giving of reasonable notice.144 [page 174] There is an important contrast between the right of termination which the buyer enjoyed in the examples given and the right to damages which accrued to the buyer when the breach of contract occurred. The right to damages is regarded as a more significant matter. Standing alone, an election in respect of a right of termination does not extend to the promisee’s right to compensation. In order for that right to be lost the general rule is that there must be consideration.145 However, in some cases waiver will have a greater effect than a mere election. So, ‘waiver’ has sometimes been used to describe situations in which a right to claim damages following breach has been lost or ceased to be available. There are two categories of case. First, the requirement of consideration may be satisfied. For example, a party to a contract might agree to accept payment of $1000 in return for a promise to ‘waive’ the right to claim damages. An appropriate construction of the word in that context would be to describe an agreement to compromise the claim.146 The contract may be express or implied. Second, there may be an estoppel in relation to the right to claim damages. However, in order for that to occur, it would need to be shown the promise or representation on which the party has relied extended further than the right of termination to include the right to sue for damages. It is suggested, however, that there is nothing to be gained in employing ‘waiver’ to describe any of the above situations. Indeed, there is much to be lost in utilising such an ambiguous word, which serves more to confuse than to clarify.147 1.
See, eg Paul Finn, ‘Equitable Estoppel’ in Finn, ed, Essays in Equity, 1985, p 59; J W Carter, ‘Contract, Restitution and Promissory Estoppel’ (1989) 12 UNSWLJ 30; K E Lindgren, ‘Estoppel in Contract’ (1989) 12 UNSWLJ 153; Patrick Parkinson, ‘Equitable Estoppel: Developments after Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher’ (1990) 3 JCL 50; Michael Spence, ‘Australian Estoppel and the Protection of Reliance’ (1997) 11 JCL 203. See also Andrew Robertson, ‘The Failure of Exonomic Analysis of Promissory Estoppel’ (1999) 15 JCL 69.
2.
[1966] 2 QB 617.
3.
[1966] 2 QB 617 at 624. See also Collier v P & M J Wright (Holdings) Ltd [2008] 1 WLR 643 at 658; [2007] EWCA Civ 1329 at [37].
4.
But see Collier v P & M J Wright (Holdings) Ltd [2008] 1 WLR 643 at 659; [2007] EWCA Civ 1329 at [42] (the debt is extinguished).
5.
See [7-05].
6.
(1933) 49 CLR 507 at 547.
7.
(1937) 59 CLR 641.
8.
(1937) 59 CLR 641 at 674.
9.
See [6-09].
10.
(1933) 49 CLR 507.
11.
(1933) 49 CLR 507 at 547.
12.
(1937) 59 CLR 641.
13.
(1937) 59 CLR 641 at 674–5.
14.
Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 411; 95 ALR 321 per Mason CJ. See also A F Mason, ‘Contract, Good Faith and Equitable Standards in Fair Dealing’ (2000) 116 LQR 66 at 91. The point was left open in Giumelli v Giumelli (1999) 196 CLR 101 at 112; 161 ALR 473.
15.
See further [7-17], and generally on unconscionability Chapter 24.
16.
See, eg Amalgamated Investment & Property Co Ltd v Texas Commerce International Bank Ltd [1982] QB 84 at 106; Taylors Fashions Ltd v Liverpool Victoria Trustees Co Ltd [1982] QB 133n at 151; Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher (1988) 164 CLR 387 at 404, 419; 76 ALR 513; Silovi Pty Ltd v Barbaro (1988) 13 NSWLR 466 at 472; Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 especially at 409ff, 431ff, 453–4, 500.
17.
See National Westminster Bank Plc v Somer International (UK) Ltd [2002] QB 1286 at 1303.
18.
See, eg Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 (pre-existing relation of plaintiff and defendant).
19.
(1877) 2 App Cas 439. See also Birmingham & District Land Co v London & North Western Railway Co (1888) 40 Ch D 268 at 285–6.
20.
(1877) 2 App Cas 439 at 448.
21.
[1947] KB 130.
22.
[1947] KB 130 at 134.
23.
[1955] 2 All ER 657. See also Combe v Combe [1951] 2 KB 215; D & C Builders Ltd v Rees [1966] 2 QB 617; W J Alan & Co Ltd v El Nasr Export & Import Co [1972] 2 QB 189; Woodhouse AC Israel Cocoa Ltd SA v Nigerian Produce Marketing Co Ltd [1972] AC 741; Brikom Investments Ltd v Carr [1979] QB 467.
24.
[1964] 1 WLR 1326.
25.
(1983) 152 CLR 406; 46 ALR 1.
26.
See, eg Je Maintiendrai Pty Ltd v Quaglia (1980) 26 SASR 101; Gollin & Co Ltd v Consolidated Fertilizer Sales Pty Ltd [1982] Qd R 435; Reed v Sheehan (1982) 56 FLR 206. But cf Barns v Queensland National Bank Ltd (1906) 3 CLR 925.
27.
(1877) 2 App Cas 439 at 448 (see [7-08]).
28.
(1983) 152 CLR 406 at 432.
29.
(1983) 152 CLR 406 at 434–5.
30.
See also [31-13] (relief against forfeiture).
31.
See also [31-10].
32.
[1986] AC 898 at 908.
33.
(1988) 164 CLR 387 (see [7-12]).
34.
See further [7-11], [7-13], [7-21]–[7-22].
35.
See, eg Syros Shipping Co SA v Elaghill Trading Co (The Proodos C) [1981] 3 All ER 189 at 191; Amalgamated Investment & Property Co Ltd v Texas Commerce International Bank Ltd [1982] QB 84 at 105; Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 434ff.
36.
(1988) 164 CLR 387 (see [7-12]).
37.
See further [7-19]–[7-23].
38.
(1988) 164 CLR 387. See K C T Sutton, ‘Contract by Estoppel’ (1988) 1 JCL 205; C N H Bagot, ‘Equitable Estoppel and Contractual Obligations in the Light of Waltons v Maher’ (1988) 62 ALJ 926.
39.
It was also held that s 54A of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) did not preclude the Mahers from obtaining relief; see [9-21].
40.
Mason CJ, Wilson and Brennan JJ.
41.
Contrast A-G (Hong Kong) v Humphreys Estate (Queen’s Gardens) Ltd [1987] AC 114.
42.
(1988) 164 CLR 387 at 406. Cf Cobbe v Yeoman’s Row Management Ltd [2008] 1 WLR 1752 at 1780–1, 1784; [2008] UKHL 55 at [62], [75] (see Ben McFarlane and Andrew Robertson, (2009) 125 LQR 535).
43.
[1987] AC 114.
44.
Contrast S & E Promotions Pty Ltd v Tobin Bros Pty Ltd (1994) 122 ALR 637 where relief analogous to specific performance was granted.
45.
See S & E Promotions Pty Ltd v Tobin Bros Pty Ltd (1994) 122 ALR 637 at 640. See generally on damages in lieu of specific performance [36-25]–[36-29].
46.
See further [7-21].
47.
Cf [7-22].
48.
(1988) 164 CLR 387 (see [7-12]).
49.
The doctrine may also be applicable to chattels and choses in action. See Cobbe v Yeoman’s Row Management Ltd [2008] 1 WLR 1752 at 1761; [2008] UKHL 55 at [14].
50.
See, eg Dillwyn v Llewellyn (1862) 4 De GF & J 517; 45 ER 1285; Ramsden v Dyson (1866) LR 1 HL 129; Plimmer v Mayor of Wellington (1884) 9 App Cas 699; Inwards v Baker [1965] 2 QB 29; Riches v Hogben [1986] 1 Qd R 315; Cobbe v Yeoman’s Row Management Ltd [2008] 1 WLR 1752; [2008] UKHL 55; Thorner v Major [2009] 1 WLR 776; [2009] UKHL 18 (see Brian Sloan, [2009] CLJ 518). For discussion see Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, paras 17-075–17-120. See also Lee v Ferno Holdings Pty Ltd (1993) 33 NSWLR 404 (specific performance on basis of estoppel by convention).
51.
(1989) 16 NSWLR 582.
52.
(1989) 16 NSWLR 582 at 585.
53.
(1989) 16 NSWLR 582 at 620.
54.
Such as Crabb v Arun District Council [1976] Ch 179; Taylors Fashions Ltd v Liverpool Victoria Trustees Co Ltd [1982] QB 133n esp at 145–155; Habib Bank Ltd v Habib Bank AG Zurich [1981] 1 WLR 1265 esp at 1285; Amalgamated Investment & Property Co Ltd v Texas Commerce International Bank Ltd [1982] QB 84 esp at 104.
55.
[1987] AC 114.
56.
(1989) 16 NSWLR 582 at 610 (qualifying what he had said in Silovi Pty Ltd v Barbaro (1988) 13 NSWLR 466 at 472).
57.
Cf DHJPM Pty Ltd v Blackthorn Resources Ltd (formerly called Aim Resources Ltd) (2011) 285 ALR 311; [2011] NSWCA 348. See [7-05].
58.
[1964] 1 WLR 1326.
59.
[1964] 1 WLR 1326 at 1330.
60.
[1964] 1 WLR 1326 at 1330.
61.
(1988) 164 CLR 387.
62.
(1988) 164 CLR 387 at 428–9.
63.
See, eg Metropolitan Transit Authority v Waverley Transit Pty Ltd [1991] 1 VR 181 at 208; Austotel Pty Ltd v Franklins Selfserve Pty Ltd (1989) 16 NSWLR 582 at 610; Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 502; Hyec Electronics Pty Ltd (in liq) v Mead (2003) 202 ALR 688 at 712.
64.
On the interpretation and application of elements (4) and (5) see Austral Standard Cables Pty Ltd v Walker Nominees Pty Ltd (1992) 26 NSWLR 524 at 540; S & E Promotions Pty Ltd v Tobin Bros Pty Ltd (1994) 122 ALR 637 at 653–4.
65.
(1983) 152 CLR 406 (see [7-09]).
66.
See, eg Allied Marine Transport Ltd v Vale do Rio Doce Navegacao SA (The Leonides D) [1985] 1 WLR 925 at 937; China Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v P S Chellaram & Co Ltd (1990) 28 NSWLR 354 at 367, 379 (affirmed (1992) 176 CLR 695); Elkoury v Farrow Mortgage Services Pty Ltd (1993) 114 ALR 541 at 548.
67.
Drexel Burnham Lambert International NV v El Nasr [1986] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 356 at 365. Contrast Flinn v Flinn [1999] 3 VR 712 at 738 (proprietary estoppel).
68.
See, eg Allied Marine Transport Ltd v Vale do Rio Doce Navegacao SA (The Leonides D) [1985] 1 WLR 925 at 937.
69.
Cf Greenwood v Martins Bank Ltd [1933] AC 51.
70.
(1988) 164 CLR 387 (see [7-12]). Contrast K Lokumal & Sons (London) Ltd v Lotte Shipping Co Pte Ltd (The August Leonhardt) [1985] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 28.
71.
(1999) 196 CLR 101 at 121.
72.
[1985] 2 Qd R 292 at 300–1.
73.
(1980) 26 SASR 101.
74.
[1972] 2 QB 189 at 213.
75.
(1980) 26 SASR 101 at 106.
76.
(1983) 152 CLR 406 (see [7-09]).
77.
(1983) 152 CLR 406 at 437. See also Hawker Pacific Pty Ltd v Helicopter Charter Pty Ltd (1991) 22 NSWLR 298 at 308.
78.
Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 407. See also Anthony Mason, ‘The
Place of Equity and Equitable Remedies in the Contemporary Common Law World’ (1994) 110 LQR 238 at 254, 256. 79.
(1983) 152 CLR 406 (see [7-09]).
80.
[1966] 2 QB 617. See also Official Trustee in Bankruptcy v Tooheys Ltd (1993) 29 NSWLR 641 (misrepresentation).
81.
That is, in accordance with Foakes v Beer (1884) 9 App Cas 605 (see [6-57]).
82.
(1854) 5 HLC 185; 10 ER 868.
83.
See, eg Pickard v Sears (1837) 6 Ad & El 469; 112 ER 179; Freeman v Cooke (1848) 2 Ex 654; 154 ER 652.
84.
(1883) 8 App Cas 467. See also Yorkshire Insurance Co Ltd v Craine [1922] 2 AC 541.
85.
(1883) 8 App Cas 467 at 473 per the Earl of Selborne LC. And see Samuel Stoljar, ‘Enforcing Benevolent Promises’ (1989) 12 Syd LR 17 at 24–8.
86.
(1983) 152 CLR 406 (see [7-09]).
87.
(1989) 168 CLR 385 at 411–12, 435–6; 88 ALR 413. But cf Con-Stan Industries of Australia Pty Ltd v Norwich Winterthur Insurance (Australia) Ltd (1986) 160 CLR 226 at 244–5; 64 ALR 481. And see the judgment of Priestley JA in Update Constructions Pty Ltd v Rozelle Child Care Centre Ltd (1990) 20 NSWLR 251 (see Peta Spender (1991) 4 JCL 158).
88.
(1990) 170 CLR 394 (see Michael Spence (1991) 107 LQR 221).
89.
Sir Anthony Mason, ‘Changing the Law in a Changing Society’ (1993) 67 ALJ 568 at 572. See also A F Mason, ‘Contract, Good Faith and Equitable Standards in Fair Dealing’ (2000) 116 LQR 66 at 90. Cf Hawker Pacific Pty Ltd v Helicopter Charter Pty Ltd (1991) 22 NSWLR 298 at 307.
90.
See Anthony Mason, ‘The Place of Equity and Equitable Remedies in the Contemporary Common Law World’ (1994) 110 LQR 238 at 254. Cf S & E Promotions Pty Ltd v Tobin Bros Pty Ltd (1994) 122 ALR 637 at 653.
91.
See further [7-21].
92.
See Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 413, 415, 453–4, 487.
93.
(1999) 196 CLR 101. See David Wright [1999] CLJ 476; James Edelman, ‘Remedial Certainty or Remedial Discretion in Estoppel after Giumelli?’ (1999) 15 JCL 179. See also Donis v Donis (2007) 19 VR 577 at 582; [2007] VSCA 89 at [19]. Contrast Flinn v Flinn [1999] 3 VR 712 at 750.
94.
(1999) 196 CLR 101 at 125.
95.
[1947] KB 130 (see [7-08]).
96.
(1983) 152 CLR 406 (see [7-09]).
97.
See, eg Amalgamated Investment & Property Co Ltd v Texas Commerce International Bank Ltd [1982] QB 84 at 103, 122; Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher (1988) 164 CLR 387 at 419; Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 412, 442; Official Trustee in Bankruptcy v Tooheys Ltd (1993) 29 NSWLR 641 at 650.
98.
See, eg Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher (1988) 164 CLR 387 at 419; Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 411, 429, 501. See also Anthony Mason, ‘The Place of Equity and Equitable Remedies in the Contemporary Common Law World’ (1994) 110 LQR 238 at 254.
99.
(1988) 164 CLR 387 (see [7-12]). Cf Government of Swaziland Central Transport Administration v Leila Maritime Co Ltd (The Leila) [1985] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 172 at 179.
100. See, eg Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher (1988) 164 CLR 387 at 405; Commonwealth of
Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 411–12, 475–6, 487, 501. 101. On the role of minimum equity concept, see Delaforce v Simpson-Cook (2010) 78 NSWLR 483; [2010] NSWCA 84. 102. See Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 434ff. 103. (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 410. Cf Amalgamated Investment & Property Co Ltd v Texas Commerce International Bank Ltd [1982] QB 84 at 131 (‘matter of semantics’). 104. See [7-18]. 105. See Anthony Mason, ‘The Place of Equity and Equitable Remedies in the Contemporary Common Law World’ (1994) 110 LQR 238 at 254. 106. See [35-10]. 107. Cf Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394. 108. (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 434ff. 109. See (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 453ff. Cf Amalgamated Investment & Property Co Ltd v Texas Commerce International Bank Ltd [1982] QB 84 at 105–7. 110. See, eg S D Henderson, ‘Promissory Estoppel and Traditional Contract Doctrine’ (1969) 78 Yale LJ 343. 111. 51 Cal 2d 409; 333 P 2d 757 (1958). 112. 51 Cal 2d 409; 333 P 2d 757 at 760 (1958). 113. 51 Cal 2d 409; 333 P 2d 757 at 760 (1958). 114. Corbin on Contracts, Vol 1, 1963, §§634ff. 115. Cf Hoffman v Red Owl Stores Inc 133 NW 2d 267 (1965). 116. See Chapter 28. 117. Unless the reciprocal obligations outstanding are comparable obligations to pay or release liquidated sums. See [6-56]–[6-61]. 118. See Atlantic Shipping & Trading Ltd v Louis Dreyfus & Co [1922] 2 AC 250 at 262–3 (release of an accrued cause of action); Foakes v Beer (1884) 9 App Cas 605 (release of part of a debt — see [657]). 119. See [6-50]–[6-55]. 120. See [9-26]. 121. See [9-26]. 122. See [6-41]–[6-49]. 123. See Vanbergen v St Edmund’s Properties Ltd [1933] 2 KB 223, a case of creditor and debtor. 124. Cf Wilson v Kingsgate Mining Industries Pty Ltd [1973] 2 NSWLR 713 at 730; Glen-core Grain Ltd v Flacker Shipping Ltd (The Happy Day) [2002] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 487 at 505. 125. See [7-28]. 126. Cf [9-25]–[9-27] (formal requirements). 127. See, eg Ewart, Waiver Distributed, 1917; Tony Dugdale and David Yates, ‘Variation, Waiver and Estoppel — A Re-Appraisal’ (1976) 39 MLR 681; H K Lücke, ‘Non-contractual Arrangements for the Modification of Performance: Forbearance, Waiver and Equitable Estoppel’ (1991) 21 UWALR 149; J W Carter, ‘Waiver (of Contractual Rights) Distributed’ (1991) 4 JCL 59. See also [31-06].
128. See, eg Craine v Colonial Mutual Fire Insurance Co Ltd (1920) 28 CLR 305 at 326 (affirmed sub nom Yorkshire Insurance Co Ltd v Craine [1922] 2 AC 541); Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 406. 129. See generally on termination for breach Chapter 30. 130. See Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 421–2 and [31-05], [31-06]. 131. For detailed discussion of the requirements of election see [18-47]–[18-48], [31-04]–[31-06]. 132. Cf Larratt v Bankers and Traders Insurance Co Ltd (1941) 41 SR (NSW) 215 at 227; Kammins Ballrooms Co Ltd v Zenith Investments (Torquay) Ltd [1971] AC 850 at 883. 133. Craine v Colonial Mutual Fire Insurance Co Ltd (1920) 28 CLR 305 at 326 (affirmed sub nom Yorkshire Insurance Co Ltd v Craine [1922] 2 AC 541). 134. For the meaning of this expression see [29-08]. 135. See also [31-09], [31-10]. 136. See Wilson v Kingsgate Mining Industries Pty Ltd [1973] 2 NSWLR 713 at 731; Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 407, 450. 137. See Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 422, and further [31-08]. 138. But, as Lord Wilberforce said in Johnson v Agnew [1980] AC 367 at 398: ‘Election, though the subject of much learning and refinement, is in the end a doctrine based on simple considerations of common sense and equity’. 139. See [7-05], [7-17]. 140. Cf Craine v Colonial Mutual Fire Insurance Co Ltd (1920) 28 CLR 305 at 326 (affirmed sub nom Yorkshire Insurance Co Ltd v Craine [1922] 2 AC 541); Deaves v CML Fire and General Insurance Co Ltd (1979) 143 CLR 24 at 42; 23 ALR 539. See further on the requirement [31-05]. 141. Cf Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH v Vanden Avenne-Izegem PVBA [1978] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 109 at 127. 142. See, eg [7-16]. 143. See, eg Motor Oil Hellas (Corinth) Refineries SA v Shipping Corp of India (The Kanchenjunga) [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 391 at 399. 144. Cf Hughes v Metropolitan Railway Co (1877) 2 App Cas 439 at 452; Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 474–5. 145. See Motor Oil Hellas (Corinth) Refineries SA v Shipping Corp of India (The Kanchenjunga) [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 391. 146. See Mulcahy v Hoyne (1925) 36 CLR 41 at 58. Cf Orr v Ford (1989) 167 CLR 316 at 337–8; 84 ALR 146 (acquiescence). 147. For a recent discussion see Agricultural and Rural Finance Pty Ltd v Gardiner (2008) 238 CLR 570; 251 ALR 322; [2008] HCA 57.
[page 175]
Chapter 8
Promises Intended to Create Legal Relations [8-01] Intention to create legal relations an essential element. Does the furnishing of consideration, as Williston argued,1 import an intention that the promise so ‘bought’ be legally binding and so render superfluous any separate inquiry on whether the promise is intended to be legally binding? Conversely, is consideration merely one form of evidence of intention to create legal relations not warranting the status of an independent element of a contract? We have already seen that the answer to the latter question is ‘no’.2 The former question is answered ‘no’ in this chapter. Consideration and intention to create legal relations are clearly interrelated. The presence of the former suggests the presence of the latter. However, the law requires that, in addition to agreement and consideration, a third element is necessary to a contract, namely, an intention to create legal relations.3 Equally, since a contract is a ‘legally binding agreement’, it would be paradoxical if an agreement could be held a contract in the face of the parties’ intention that it should not give rise to legal rights and obligations. Therefore, a common positive intention not to contract will be respected.4 The requirement that there be an intention to create legal relations does not mean that a party seeking to enforce a contract must show that the parties consciously adverted to the legal implications of what they were doing. Moreover, because the test of intention is objective,5 it is not usually open to one party to prove that subjectively a unilateral intention was that legal relations should not arise.6 Therefore, in practice, the issue of [page 176]
intention to create legal relations does not often arise. Accordingly, apart from the uncommon cases where the parties agree that their agreement is not to attract legal consequences,7 the issue is determined as an inference of fact in the drawing of which two rebuttable presumptions of fact,8 based on common experience, play a part. [8-02] Intention may be express or implied. The presence or absence of the intention to be legally bound depends on the facts of each case.9 The relevant intention may be express or implied.10 However, in the case of parties at arm’s length, and in particular, in the case of commercial agreements, an intention that the agreement was not intended to be legally binding will not lightly be inferred. On the other hand, in the case of consensual relations between close friends or members of a family, it will be more easily inferred that agreement and consideration were not accompanied by contractual intent. Although the requirement of intention is of general application, it is convenient to consider the cases in classes.
Family, Social and Domestic Agreements [8-03] Presumption that such agreements held not binding. Experience of life shows that close relatives do not usually intend the various arrangements which they make to create legal relations and that they prefer to rely on ‘family ties of mutual trust and affection’.11 The law therefore recognises a rebuttable presumption of fact that relatives, such as husband and wife and parent and child, do not intend their agreements to be contracts. The justification for the presumption does not exist — and so the presumption does not arise or is rebutted — where husband and wife have ceased living in amity and have separated or are about to separate at the time of the making of the agreement.12 In the leading case, Balfour v Balfour,13 a wife could not, for medical reasons, accompany her husband from England back to Ceylon (his place of employment) and he orally promised to pay her an allowance of £30 per month until she could rejoin him. This promise was held not binding for lack of an intention that the understanding should be legally enforceable. Atkin LJ said:14 … there are agreements between parties which do not result in contracts within the meaning of that term in our law. The ordinary example is where two parties agree to take a walk together, or where there is an offer and an
[page 177] acceptance of hospitality. Nobody would suggest in ordinary circumstances that those agreements result in what we know as a contract, and one of the most usual forms of agreement which does not constitute a contract appears to me to be the arrangements which are made between husband and wife. It is quite common, and it is the natural and inevitable result of the relationship of husband and wife, that the two spouses should make arrangements between themselves … those agreements, or many of them, do not result in contracts at all, and they do not result in contracts even though there may be what as between other parties would constitute consideration for the agreement … It constantly happens, I think, that such arrangements made between husband and wife are arrangements in which there are mutual promises, or in which there is consideration in form within the definition that I have mentioned. Nevertheless they are not contracts, and they are not contracts because the parties did not intend that they should be attended by legal consequences.
In Cohen v Cohen,15 Dixon J, by similar reasoning, held an arrangement between an intending husband and wife as to a dress allowance to the latter not a contract. After referring to questions of consideration, and s 4 of the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp), he said:16 But these matters only arise if the arrangement which the plaintiff made with the defendant was intended to affect or give rise to legal relations or to be attended with legal consequences (Balfour v Balfour;17 Rose & Frank Co v J R Crompton & Bros Ltd18). I think it was not so intended. The parties did no more, in my view, than discuss and concur in a proposal for the regular allowance to the wife of a sum which they considered appropriate to their circumstances at the time of marriage.
Although it is right for the courts to exercise a degree of vigilance in ensuring that the courts are not used as a forum for purely vindictive litigation in relation to agreements which no reasonable person would regard as having the force of law, it is by no means clear that the decisions reached in the above cases would be reached today. Normal court procedures exist to deal with vexatious litigants, and the courts must be careful to see that agreements which are intended to be taken seriously are observed. To leave the wife in Balfour v Balfour without a means of supporting herself seems entirely unjustified and smacks of bias against married women. Moreover, as has been pointed out,19 Atkin LJ failed to distinguish a purely social promise — the agreement for a walk — which is not intended to be enforceable, from a ‘benevolent’ promise contemplating reliance of a serious or injurious kind. In Jones v Padavatton20 an arrangement was reached between a mother and her 34-year-old daughter that the mother would maintain her at a specified rate if she would go to England and read for the Bar with a view to practising later in Trinidad. This arrangement necessitated the daughter’s abandoning a comfortable flat and a secure remunerative job in Washington and her sevenyear-old son’s education there. After her arrival
[page 178] in England there was a variation to the arrangements under which the mother purchased a house in which the defendant could live. Rooms were let to tenants, but none of the rental payments were remitted to the mother, who was paying off a substantial mortgage. Even though the daughter did not live with her mother, was well above the age of majority and had a family of her own, the English Court of Appeal held that there was no intention to be legally bound. Although the court was also influenced by elements of uncertainty in the arrangements with respect to the house,21 it may be asked whether it would today be appropriate to treat such an arrangement as attracting a presumption that there was no intention to create legal relations. [8-04] Rebuttal of the presumption. In many cases agreements between husband and wife have been upheld as contracts, for example: a written partnership;22 an agreement to pay and accept a stipulated weekly amount for maintenance and to indemnify as part of a compromise of litigation comprising crosssummonses for assault;23 and an agreement by the wife to return to live with her husband in consideration of the husband’s promise to transfer title to the matrimonial home into both names.24 Other cases have involved promises, usually by an elderly or disabled person, to devise or otherwise make over title to property (often a residence) to a friend or relative in consideration of the promisee’s taking up residence with the promisor and/or rendering or promising to render household and/or personal services to the promisor.25 It is not difficult to infer the requisite intention to create legal relations, at least where implementation of the arrangement requires the promisee to give up or dispose of existing advantages, for example, an advantageous existing place of residence, perhaps some distance away.26
Commercial Agreements [8-05] Presumption that parties intend to be legally bound. It follows from what was said above27 that in commercial agreements it is rare for the conclusion to be drawn that the parties did not intend their agreement to be
attended by legal consequences. Only rarely will the presumption be rebutted, and the onus of establishing that a commercial [page 179] agreement was not to create legal relations rests on the party so contending.28 Where an express exclusion of that intention is alleged, the words used must be clear and unambiguous. In Edwards v Skyways Ltd29 the use of the words ‘ex gratia’ to describe a promise of payment was held by Megaw J as insufficient to negative contractual intention. The words were construed to signify only that the promisor did not admit a liability to make the payment. And in Kleinwort Benson Ltd v Malaysia Mining Corp Berhad30 the English Court of Appeal said that if it is alleged that a commercial agreement was not intended to have legal force this must be justified by proof of a separate agreement to that effect. [8-06] Honour clauses. So called ‘honour clauses’ declare that an agreement is not to be legally binding, with the result that the agreement is ‘binding in honour only’. Such clauses are not often encountered. They might be used where the parties are prepared to rely on non-legal sanctions, for example, their ongoing commercial dealings with each other, as an inducement to performance. In the leading case Rose & Frank Co v J R Crompton & Bros Ltd31 an agreement between an English manufacturer and a New York dealer giving the latter certain selling rights in respect of the former’s products contained the following ‘Honourable Pledge clause’: This arrangement is not entered into, nor is this memorandum written, as a formal or legal agreement, and shall not be subject to legal jurisdiction in the law courts either in the United States or England, but is only a definite expression and record of the purpose and intention of the parties concerned, to which they each honourably pledge themselves …
The clause was held effective according to its terms. In the English Court of Appeal, Scrutton LJ observed that in social and family relations an intention not to create legal relations is readily implied, whereas in business matters the reverse is ordinarily the case, but that even in business matters there is no reason why the parties could not ‘exclude all idea of settling disputes by any outside intervention, with the accompanying necessity of expressing themselves so precisely that outsiders may have no difficulty in understanding what they mean’.32 The House of Lords agreed with this conclusion. [8-07] Promotional puff. As is noted elsewhere,33 the extravagant, nonspecific
language of the advertiser may fail to satisfy the criteria of a representation of fact. Such language may also fail as the basis itself of contractual obligation for the reason that this was not intended. So, in Lexmead (Basingstoke) Ltd v Lewis34 a manufacturer’s advertising literature [page 180] accompanying its dual purpose towing hitches stated that they were ‘foolproof’ and ‘required no maintenance’. The English Court of Appeal agreed with the trial judge’s conclusion that the advertiser’s claims ‘were not intended to be, nor were they acted upon as being express warranties’.35 On the other hand, an argument of ‘mere puff’ failed in Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co36 if for no other reason, because the defendant declared that it had deposited £1000 with a bank to show its ‘sincerity in the matter’ of a promised £100 reward to any person who contracted influenza after using the defendant’s smoke ball in accordance with the directions. In Esso Petroleum Ltd v Commissioners of Customs and Excise37 the issue before the House of Lords was whether certain goods — ‘World Cup coins’ — were ‘produced … for sale’ and therefore chargeable to purchase tax under tax legislation. These coins were of no intrinsic value, but bore the likenesses of the English soccer team. As part of a promotional scheme by Esso, they were provided to motorists. One coin was given for every four gallons of Esso petrol which motorists purchased. The members of the House of Lords who expressed an opinion on the question of whether Esso or the service station proprietors on the one hand, and motorists on the other, intended that there should be a legally binding obligation to supply the coins were evenly divided. One view emphasised the commercial advantage which Esso and the proprietors expected from the sales promotion, and held legal relations to be intended. The other emphasised the language used in the promotional material (for example, ‘free’, ‘gifts’), the unlikelihood of legal proceedings if coins were not supplied, the coins’ lack of intrinsic value and the fact that it is, after all, legally possible to make gifts within a commercial setting. [8-08] Distinction unsatisfactory. The supposed simple distinction between ‘family, social and domestic agreements’ and ‘commercial agreements’ can be misleading. This is illustrated by Roufos v Brewster.38 Mr and Mrs Brewster conducted a motel business at Coober Pedy and their son-in-law, Mr Roufos, ran
a store there. Roufos took the Brewsters’ truck on his semi-trailer to Adelaide for repairs and an arrangement was made between Mrs Brewster and her daughter (Mrs Roufos) that Mr Roufos should engage a driver to drive the truck back to Coober Pedy on the footing that he might, if he wished, send back a load of his own goods on the truck. This arrangement was implemented, but the truck was damaged en route. The Brewsters sued Roufos for damages for breach of contract to recover the cost of repairs. Bray CJ observed:39 It is true that the appellant is the son-in-law of the respondents, but they were conducting separate businesses at Coober Pedy, there was, according to the evidence of Mrs Roufos, intermittent hostility between Mr Roufos and his parents-in-law, and the appellant had an important commercial interest in the transport of his liquor to Coober Pedy for the purpose of his new restaurant … just as the respondents had a commercial interest in regaining
[page 181] the use of their truck as soon as possible. The whole setting of the arrangement is commercial rather than social or domestic.
More recently, in Ermogenous v Greek Orthodox Community of SA Inc40 the High Court was sceptical of the ability to formulate acceptable rules to prescribe the kinds of cases in which an intention to create legal relations should be found to exist. Thus, Gaudron, McHugh, Hayne and Callinan JJ doubted41 the ‘utility of using the language of presumptions’ in the context of an arrangement with a person engaged by a community organisation to serve as an archbishop. It was held that no presumption was applicable in such a context, and that the relationship at issue was one of contract.
Particular Situations [8-09] Government schemes. A government or governmental agency may administer a scheme, plan or policy involving the prospect of governmental subsidies or other assistance to persons who satisfy stated criteria. Typically these persons will be required to ‘co-operate’, at the very least by applying for the benefit and furnishing information, and perhaps by doing other acts. A person aggrieved by refusal of benefits may seek to enforce the scheme, plan or policy as a contract. On the basis of the issues discussed in earlier chapters, the scheme, plan or policy may fail as a contract because: (1) on a proper construction, the words used did not amount to an offer or acceptance (as the case
may be);42 or (7) what is propounded by the claimant as consideration was in truth a condition precedent,43 or was not furnished with reference to the offer.44
An alternative rationalisation is that there was no intention to create legal obligations. The circular or other document announcing or explaining the scheme, plan or policy may be regarded by the court as ‘administrative’ as distinct from ‘contractual’, and as distinct from an offer of a contract. In The Administration of the Territory of Papua New Guinea v Leahy45 McTiernan J expressed the relevant principle as it applied to the facts of that case as follows:46 The arrangement consisted of agreed promises but that is not enough to make a contract, unless it was the common intention of the parties to enter into legal obligations, mutually communicated, expressly or impliedly. It was not an express or implied term of the arrangement that the respondent should make any payment for the treatment of the cattle. I cannot agree that the Administration through its officers intended to enter into legal relations
[page 182] when, at the request of the respondent, it undertook the organisation of the tick eradication campaign with respect to his cattle. The conduct of the parties constituted an administrative arrangement by which the Administration in pursuance of its agricultural policy, gave assistance to an owner of stock to prevent that stock contracting a disease which was prevalent in the Territory. The work done by the Administration was analogous to a social service which generally does not have as its basis a legal relationship of a contractual nature and from which no right of action would arise in favour of the citizen who is receiving the services if the Government acts inefficiently in performing them.
In such cases the proper view to be taken is that it was intended to attract political and administrative rather than contractual sanctions.47 [8-10] The constitutions of voluntary associations. The constitutive rules of an association may be sought to be enforced as a contract. It may, however, be argued that particular sets of rules were not intended to create legal relations with the result that breach of them was not actionable. The leading case is Cameron v Hogan48 in which the plaintiff alleged that he had been wrongfully expelled from the Australian Labor Party of the State of Victoria. In denying him declaratory and injunctive relief, Rich, Dixon, Evatt and McTiernan JJ said that the test was whether a member enjoyed under the rules ‘some civil right of a proprietary nature proper to be protected’,49 and remarked that membership of the Party carried with it ‘no tangible or practical proprietary right’.50 In Finlayson v Carr,51 the test of ‘tangible or practical proprietary right’ led to a conclusion that the rules and regulations of the Australian Jockey Club did create
a contractual relationship between its members. In the case of companies registered under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), s 140(1) provides that a company’s constitution (if any) and any replaceable rules that apply to the company have effect as a contract:52 (a) between the company and each member; (b) between the company and each director and company secretary; and (c) between a member and each other member; under which each person agrees to observe and perform the constitution and rules so far as they apply to that person.
This binds each to observe and perform the provisions of the constitution and rules so far as applicable to the person in question,53 and so appears to obviate the necessity of any inquiry as to whether the general law requirement of contractual intent is satisfied. Whether this apparent effect could be negated by an ‘honour clause’54 in the constitution is doubtful, [page 183] because the legislation reveals an intention that part of the price for the benefits of registration shall be enforceability at the instance of individual members. [8-11] Other cases. It must not be assumed that there is an exhaustive list of classes of case in which there is no intention to create legal relations, or that any one system of classification is ‘correct’. In particular agreements, the allowance to one party of a wide discretion as to performance, for example ‘at the pleasure of the Board of Directors of the [defendant] company and subject to its sole discretion’,55 the vagueness of the language of a promise and the importance or otherwise of the agreement to the parties may all influence the decision on whether there was an intention to create legal relations.
Conclusion [8-12] Overlap between intention, agreement and consideration. Frequently there is overlap between the issue of intention to create legal relations and the issues of agreement and consideration. This is perhaps more obvious, if, instead of speaking of ‘intention to create legal relations’, we speak of ‘intention to be immediately committed to a contract’. The firmer the intention to create legal
rights and obligations immediately, the more probable it is that the terms of agreement will be certain and particular. Conversely, vagueness and generality of terms may point to an absence of contractual intent.56 The other overlap, that between consideration and intention to create legal relations, is well established.57 Horton v Jones58 illustrates the interrelationship of all three elements. In that case there were issues as to: (1) whether a woman’s promise to a person since deceased to enter into his service and to act as his secretary, housekeeper and nurse for the rest of his life was too vague and uncertain to constitute consideration for the deceased’s promise to leave her his ‘fortune’; and (2) whether the parties’ language was that of legal obligation. Evatt and McTiernan JJ observed59 in relation to the plaintiff, it is ‘not suggested that her past was not honourable, but it cannot be measured by any legal standards’. 1.
Williston on Contracts, 3rd ed, Vol 1, §21. The view is supported by Atco Controls Pty Ltd (in liq) v Newtronics Pty Ltd (Receivers and Managers Appointed) (in liq) (2009) 25 VR 411 at 428; [2009] VSCA 238 at [60].
2.
See [6-06].
3.
For a recent statement see Ermogenous v Greek Orthodox Community of SA Inc (2002) 209 CLR 95 at 105; 187 ALR 92 at 99. See generally H K Lücke, ‘The Intention to Create Legal Relations’ (1970) 3 Adel LR 419.
4.
See eg Equuscorp Pty Ltd v Glengallan Investments Pty Ltd (2004) 218 CLR 472 at 486; 211 ALR 101 at 111.
5.
See Toll (FGCT) Pty Ltd v Alphapharm Pty Ltd (2004) 219 CLR 165 at 178–9; 211 ALR 342 at 351. See generally [1-10]–[1-12].
6.
See Ermogenous v Greek Orthodox Community of SA Inc (2002) 209 CLR 95. An intention to contract need not be pleaded: Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Australian Safeway Stores Pty Ltd (2003) 198 ALR 657 at 740.
7.
See [8-06].
8.
See [8-03], [8-05].
9.
See Air Great Lakes Pty Ltd v K S Easter (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 309 at 336; Orion Insurance Co Plc v Sphere Drake Insurance Plc [1992] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 239 at 263, 301.
10.
See, eg Deutsche Schachtbau-und Tiefbohrgesellschaft mbH v Shell International Petroleum Co Ltd [1990] AC 295 at 315 (reversed on another point at 329).
11.
Jones v Padavatton [1969] 2 All ER 616 at 621 per Salmon LJ.
12.
Merritt v Merritt [1970] 2 All ER 760.
13.
[1919] 2 KB 571.
14.
[1919] 2 KB 571 at 578-9.
15.
(1929) 42 CLR 91.
16.
(1929) 42 CLR 91 at 96.
17.
[1919] 2 KB 571.
18.
[1923] 2 KB 261 at 288; [1925] AC 445.
19.
Samuel Stoljar, ‘Enforcing Benevolent Promises’ (1989) 12 Syd LR 17 at 19–20.
20.
[1969] 2 All ER 616.
21.
Cf Gould v Gould [1970] 1 QB 275.
22.
Milliner v Milliner (1908) 8 SR (NSW) 471.
23.
McGregor v McGregor (1888) 21 QBD 424.
24.
Popiw v Popiw [1959] VR 197.
25.
Cf Horton v Jones (1935) 53 CLR 475; Wakeling v Ripley (1951) 51 SR (NSW) 183; Todd v Nichol [1957] SASR 721; Raffaele v Raffaele [1962] WAR 29; Schaefer v Schuhmann [1972] AC 572; Palmer v Bank of NSW (1975) 133 CLR 150; 7 ALR 671; Riches v Hogben [1985] 2 Qd R 292 (affirmed [1986] 1 Qd R 315).
26.
But see Re Gonin deceased [1979] Ch 16.
27.
See especially [8-01].
28.
Cf Toyota Motor Corp Australia Ltd v Ken Morgan Motors Pty Ltd [1994] 2 VR 106 at 150, 177.
29.
[1964] 1 All ER 494.
30.
[1989] 1 WLR 379.
31.
[1923] 2 KB 261; [1925] AC 445. See also [25-26].
32.
[1923] 2 KB 261 at 288.
33.
See [10-03], [18-07].
34.
[1982] AC 225.
35.
[1982] AC 225 at 263 (on appeal the House of Lords did not discuss the issue).
36.
[1893] 1 QB 256 (see [3-08]).
37.
[1976] 1 All ER 117.
38.
(1971) 2 SASR 218.
39.
(1971) 2 SASR 218 at 222.
40.
(2002) 209 CLR 95 at 105. Cf Percy v Board of National Mission of the Church of Scotland [2006] 2 AC 28.
41.
(2002) 209 CLR 95 at 106.
42.
Cf Australian Woollen Mills Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth (1954) 92 CLR 424 at 460–5.
43.
See [6-16].
44.
See [6-15], [6-18].
45.
(1961) 105 CLR 6. See also Milne v A-G for the State of Tasmania (1956) 95 CLR 460 at 472–3. And cf South Australia v The Commonwealth (1962) 108 CLR 130.
46.
(1961) 105 CLR 6 at 11.
47.
See H K Lücke, ‘The Intention to Create Legal Relations’ (1970) 3 Adel LR 419 at 425–8; Dennis Rose, ‘The Government and Contract’, in Finn, ed, Essays on Contract, 1987, pp 238–42.
48.
(1934) 51 CLR 358.
49.
(1934) 51 CLR 358 at 377.
50.
(1934) 51 CLR 358 at 378.
51.
[1978] 1 NSWLR 657.
52.
As to whether members are bound by modifications of the constitution see Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), s 140(2).
53.
Cf Norths Ltd v McCaughan Dyson Capel Cure Ltd (1988) 12 ACLR 739; Stillwell Trucks Pty Ltd v Nectar Brook Investments Pty Ltd (1993) 115 ALR 294 at 300.
54.
See [8-06].
55.
Moir v J P Porter & Co Ltd (1979) 103 DLR (3d) 22.
56.
See Toyota Motor Corp Australia Ltd v Ken Morgan Motors Pty Ltd [1994] 2 VR 106 at 130, 202.
57.
See [6-06], [6-36], [8-01].
58.
(1935) 53 CLR 475. See also Beaton v McDivitt (1987) 13 NSWLR 162.
59.
(1935) 53 CLR 475 at 492 (emphasis supplied).
[page 184]
Chapter 9
Promises Requiring Written Evidence [9-01] Writing not generally required. A fact which often surprises the layperson is that there is no general rule requiring contracts to be in writing. Usually, a contract is valid and enforceable even though it is wholly oral or partly oral and partly written. Similarly, a contract may be inferred from conduct. Where writing is required this is because of the operation of statute.1 In such cases, statute may require the contract itself to be in writing or merely require written evidence of the contract. This chapter deals mainly with requirements which are derived from the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp). It is, as we shall see,2 sufficient for there to be written evidence of a promise within the statute. An imposed requirement of writing need not be exclusive, there may be alternative ways of satisfying the statute. For example, in the case of a sale of goods within the statutory requirements discussed in this chapter,3 the contract will be binding on a purchaser who has paid part of the price. And in what is a quite remarkable gloss on the Statute of Frauds, courts of equity have worked out a ‘doctrine of part performance’ which effectively permits enforcement of the contract even if there is no written evidence at all.4
The Statute of Frauds [9-02] Purpose of the statute. Requirements of writing have three main functions. First, an evidentiary function, a way of preventing perjury and ensuring that reliable evidence is received. Second, a cautionary function of forcing parties to think carefully about the transaction before signing the document. Third, there is a channelling function: parties may be forced to use a particular form, and similar agreements are given a similar form. The preamble to the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp) stated its purpose as the prevention of ‘many fraudulent practices, which are commonly endeavoured to
be upheld by perjury and subornation of perjury’. Thus, a requirement of writing was imposed as a formal ingredient of certain specified types of promises. The preamble looks to the first of the three functions.5 Arguably, however, only the cautionary function has real [page 185] importance in the context of the modern law of contract. The whittling away at the scope of the Statute of Frauds reflects a feeling that oral evidence is today more reliable. The fact that the main examples of contracts where writing remains essential are those involving land, where enormous sums of money may be involved, shows the relevance of the cautionary function. In the main area where new (and more onerous) requirements have been imposed, namely, consumer credit transactions, the cautionary function is patent. The evidentiary function of the Statute of Frauds is reflected in the procedural requirement that the statute be specifically pleaded when relied upon to defeat a claim.6 The defendant must allege and prove the existence of facts which bring the contract within the statute.7 It is sufficient for the defendant to prove the existence of a promise within the statute, and that the formal requirements have not been complied with. Moreover, the defendant will succeed even if the contract contains another or alternative promise, which need not be evidenced in writing and which the plaintiff might perform at his or her option.8
Relevant Provisions [9-03] Section 4. The central provision of the statute, s 4, provided as follows: And be it further enacted that from and after the said 24th day of June no action shall be brought whereby to charge any executor or administrator upon any special promise, to answer damages out of his own estate; or whereby to charge the defendant upon any special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriages of another person; or to charge any person upon any agreement made upon consideration of marriage; or upon any contract or sale of lands, tenements or hereditaments, or any interest in or concerning them; or upon any agreement that is not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof, unless the agreement upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum or note thereof shall be in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person thereunto by him lawfully authorized.
The choice of promises (contracts) seems particularly arbitrary, but Professor Simpson9 has suggested a unifying feature, namely, that they became actionable
at common law through the (then new) action of assumpsit on an oral agreement even though, previously, the contracts would not have been actionable in the absence of a sealed instrument. The statute is from that perspective a conservative measure designed to ‘put the clock back, substituting … the signature for the seal’. In respect of these informal contracts there was also the requirement of consideration. Although Lord Mansfield suggested that writing dispensed with that requirement, this was rejected towards the end of the 18th century.10 [page 186] [9-04] Section 17. The second main provision was s 17 which provided: And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that from and after the said 24th day of June no contract for the sale of any goods, wares, or merchandises, for the price of ten pounds sterling or upwards, shall be allowed to be good, except the buyer shall accept part of the goods so sold, and actually receive the same, or give something in earnest to bind the bargain, or in part of payment, or that some note or memorandum in writing of the said bargain be made and signed by the parties to be charged by such contract, or their agents thereunto lawfully authorized.
Although this section applied the requirement of writing to contracts for the sale of goods in the same way as s 4 applied it to the classes of contract there listed, there were two distinctions. First, s 17 applied only to contracts for the sale of goods if the price exceeded £10 and would not have applied to the vast majority of sale transactions. Second, alternatives to the requirement of writing were stated so that, for example, a buyer’s acceptance of goods would take the contract of sale outside the operation of the statute even though it specified a price in excess of £10. A contrast may also be found in the language used to describe the effect of s 17 (‘no contract … shall be allowed to be good’) and that stated in s 4 (‘no action shall be brought’). However, this must now be taken to have had no significance.11
Operation of the Statute and Derivative Legislation in Australia [9-05] Statute part of received law. The Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp) formed part of the received law of the Australian Colonies on their settlement in the 18th
century. However, in most jurisdictions some amendment has been made in the operation of s 4, and s 17 no longer applies in any jurisdiction.12 In the Australian Capital Territory, New South Wales, Queensland, the Northern Territory and South Australia, s 4 of the Statute of Frauds has been declared no longer to be in force.13 Even in Tasmania, Victoria and Western Australia, where s 4 is to some extent still in force, the important aspects of the section have been replaced by local enactments. Section 2 of the Law Reform (Statute of Frauds) Act 1962 (WA) deserves mention in this connection as it continues the operation of s 4 in that State but requires it to be read as if certain words were omitted. Before analysing the content and impact of the requirement of writing, it is necessary to consider each of the classes of contract enumerated in ss 4 and 17, and to indicate the current position in Australia. [page 187] [9-06] Special promises by an executor or administrator to answer damages out of his or her own estate. In Tasmania this class of contract is required to be evidenced by writing.14 In all other jurisdictions15 no requirement of writing is applicable. This type of contract has, in any event, no practical significance to the modern law of contract. An executor (or administrator) is normally liable only to the extent of the assets of the deceased and, for reasons which are not relevant to this work, it is rare for such a person to enter into contracts which impose a greater personal liability. [9-07] Contracts of guarantee. The words of s 4 of the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp), requiring a contract whereby the defendant is charged on any ‘special promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriages of another person’ to be evidenced by writing, have their main application in respect of what are more economically described as contracts of guarantee.16 For example, a person (A) may wish to borrow money from another person (B), but B may be in some doubt as to A’s ability to repay the loan, or merely wish to have some protection (other than to resort to litigation against A) in the event of A defaulting under the contract. B might therefore require a third person (C) to guarantee A’s performance of the contract. Thus, contemporaneously with
the loan between A and B, C may promise to guarantee A’s performance in consideration of B making the loan. The relationship of the parties under such an arrangement is that: C is the guarantor (or surety); B the creditor; and A the principal debtor. The promise by C was required by s 4 to be evidenced by writing. In the Northern Territory, Queensland, Tasmania, Victoria and Western Australia contracts of guarantee are required by local enactment to be in writing or evidenced by writing.17 On the other hand, in the Australian Capital Territory, New South Wales and South Australia there is no such requirement.18 In view of the fact that writing is required in a majority of Australian jurisdictions it is appropriate to mention the distinction between a [page 188] guarantee and an indemnity. In Moschi v Lep Air Services Ltd19 Lord Diplock explained:20 It follows from the legal nature of the obligation of the guarantor to which a contract of guarantee gives rise that it is not an obligation himself to pay a sum of money to the creditor, but an obligation to see to it that another person, the debtor, does something; and that the creditor’s remedy for the guarantor’s failure to perform it lies in damages for breach of contract only.
As he went on to point out, this is true even if the debtor’s own obligation, the subject of the guarantee, is to pay a sum of money. The creditor’s ability to proceed against the guarantor depends on default by the principal debtor. In the example given above, A must default in the repayment of the loan before B can call upon C to pay. On the other hand, where a contract of indemnity is present, liability may be quite independent of default by the debtor. In Birkmyr v Darnell21 the following illustration was given. If two persons go into a shop, one of whom intends to purchase goods and the other, in order to obtain credit for the first person, promises to pay the seller if the first person does not, the contract is one of guarantee. But if the second person says ‘let him have the goods, I will be your paymaster’, that is a personal undertaking to purchase the goods which provides an indemnity for the shopkeeper. In this case the shopkeeper can sue the second
person, who has given the indemnity, without seeking payment from the first person and without proving default by that person. The importance of the distinction between guarantee and indemnity is that whereas the requirement of writing applies to the former, it does not apply to the latter, the words of the statute not being descriptive of a contract of indemnity. Whether a contract is one of indemnity or guarantee depends on the construction of the contract. For example, in Yeoman Credit Ltd v Latter22 the plaintiffs, a finance company, let a motor car on hire-purchase terms to the first defendant. At the same time the second defendant signed a document headed ‘Hirepurchase indemnity and undertaking’, which provided that the second defendant would ‘indemnify’ the plaintiffs ‘against any loss resulting from or arising out of’ the hire-purchase contract. The court held that the contract was one of indemnity, not merely a guarantee. This meant that the plaintiffs were able to succeed in their action against the second defendant even though their contract with the first defendant was void by reason of the Infants’ Relief Act 1874 (UK). However, the words chosen by the parties are not conclusive. A contract described as ‘guarantee’ may actually provide for an indemnity, or an obligation of some other nature. It is, moreover, a mistake to regard all guarantees as conforming to the analysis made by Lord Diplock in Moschi.23 [page 189] If A promises to discharge a liability to which A or A’s property is already subject, the contract is not within the statute.24 But the interest in property must not be merely ‘commercial’: A must possess a legal or equitable right in the property. [9-08] Contracts made in consideration of marriage. In Tasmania a contract made in consideration of marriage is required to be in writing or evidenced by writing.25 In the other jurisdictions the requirement of writing is no longer applicable.26 This provision does not refer to a promise to marry. Thus, if A promises to marry B, the contract need not be evidenced by writing.27 However, if A makes a promise to B, for example, to pay $100 per week to C (A’s daughter) during A’s lifetime in consideration of B’s marriage to C, the contract must in Tasmania be evidenced by writing.
[9-09] Contracts for the sale of land or an interest in land. In all Australian jurisdictions, contracts for the sale of land, or an interest in land, must be written or evidenced by writing.28 Section 54A(1) of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) is representative of these provisions. It provides as follows:29 No action or proceedings may be brought upon any contract for the sale or other disposition of land or any interest in land, unless the agreement upon which such action or proceedings is brought, or some memorandum or note thereof, is in writing, and signed by the party to be charged or by some other person thereunto lawfully authorised by the party to be charged.
This is by far the most important of the contracts enumerated in the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp), as is indicated by the fact that a requirement of writing exists in all Australian jurisdictions.30 The equitable doctrine of [page 190] part performance31 also has its main application in respect of such contracts. [9-10] Contracts not to be performed within a year. In Tasmania a contract which is not to be performed within the space of one year from its making is required to be evidenced by writing.32 Writing is not required in the other jurisdictions.33 In Clarke v Tyler34 Dixon J said that for a contract ‘to answer the description of an agreement that is not be to performed within the space of one year … it is necessary that it should be of such a character that performance within a year by either side is impossible from the beginning’. In that case a share-farming agreement, which contained no express provision as to duration, was held to be within the rule because the Agricultural Holdings Act 1941 (NSW) applied and prohibited termination before the expiry of 12 months. The position would have been different if termination within the 12-month period had been permitted by the statute. [9-11] Sale of goods. In Tasmania and Western Australia a contract for the sale of goods of value at or above a specified amount must comply with one of the requirements set out in legislation derived from s 17. Thus, s 9 of the Sale of Goods Act 1896 (Tas) and s 4 of the Sale of Goods Act 1895 (WA) provide35 that a contract for the sale of any goods at or above $20 is not enforceable by action unless: the buyer accepts part of the goods so sold and actually receives the same;
the buyer gives something in earnest to bind the contract, or in part payment; or some note or memorandum in writing of the contract is made and signed by the party to be charged or his or her agent on his or her behalf. In all other jurisdictions the relevant provision of the sale of goods legislation has been repealed.36 [page 191] It will be noticed that the amount, $20, is the decimal equivalent of the £10 stated over 300 years ago in the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp). Needless to say, $20 seems totally unrealistic today.37 Four further features deserve mention. First, it is sufficient for the party to be charged to sign the note or memorandum. Second, the provisions apply notwithstanding that the goods are to be delivered at a future time, or are presently not fit for delivery. Third, there is a definition of ‘acceptance’.38 Fourth, in order for the provisions to apply the subject matter must be ‘goods’, as defined. Section 3(1) of the Sale of Goods Act 1896 (Tas) states:39 ‘Goods’ includes all chattels personal other than things in action and money. The term includes emblements, industrial growing crops, and things attached to or forming part of the land which are agreed to be severed before sale or under the contract of sale.
This definition does not embrace a contract the subject matter of which is work and materials.40 Although there is an element of product supply in such contracts, as where a builder supplies the materials (such as timber) required in the construction of a set of cupboards, the courts have distinguished a work and materials contract from one of pure sale on the basis of the element of labour, that is, the supply of services. Similarly, although the supply of a personal computer system is a supply of goods,41 to which a service element such as loading software is regarded as incidental, a contract for the supply of software is a supply of services unless it is delivered in a physical medium, rather than, for example, by way of ‘download’.42 The test to be applied was stated by Greer LJ, in Robinson v Graves,43 in terms of the ‘substance’ of the contract. He said that if you find the substance of the contract to be the skill and labour involved in the production of the article the subject of the contract, so that the transfer of materials in addition to the skill
involved is only ‘ancillary’, the contract is a work and materials contract rather than a sale of goods. The fact that property in the materials is intended to pass on delivery to the buyer is a [page 192] factor, but no more, in favour of the contract being one for the sale of goods rather than a work and materials contract.44 The following may be taken as illustrations of the distinction. A contract to paint a portrait has been held to be a contract for work and materials,45 whereas a dentist’s contract to supply a set of false teeth has been described as one for the sale of goods.46 A contract to construct and install a cocktail cabinet has been interpreted as one for work and materials,47 as has one for the supply and installation of lecture theatre seats.48 Similarly, a contract to construct a house on the builder’s premises and to deliver it to a site selected by the other party is not a contract for the sale of goods but is, instead, a contract for work and materials.49 Of course, these decisions were conclusions on particular facts. It follows that, for example, a dentist’s contract to supply a set of false teeth might in other circumstances be a work and materials contract. The expression ‘work and materials contract’ has been described as imprecise,50 and the distinction between such a contract and one for the sale of goods criticised as being imprecise and artificial.51 By and large the distinction has been drawn for the purpose of avoiding the requirement of writing. The illustrations given above certainly indicate that the distinction may be a fine one. [9-12] Other legislation. Apart from the provisions derived from the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp), examples of formal requirements may be found in legislation governing other types of contracts. The most important example is the National Credit Code (Sch 1 to National Consumer Credit Protection Act 2009 (Cth)), under which a credit provider must comply with detailed provisions relating to the form and content of contracts which involve the supply of credit. The provisions apply to contracts of sale or loan as well as certain contracts of guarantee with a credit provider. Examples in Commonwealth legislation include contracts for marine insurance, which are inadmissible in evidence in an action for recovery of a loss unless the contract is embodied in a marine policy in accordance with the provisions of the Marine Insurance Act 1909; and bills of exchange which are required by s 8(1) of the Bills of Exchange Act 1909 to be in
writing. The consequences of a failure to comply with a requirement of writing imposed by provisions derived from the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp) are dealt with later in this chapter.52 However, it should not be assumed that the same consequences apply in relation to other types of contracts subjected to a requirement of writing. For example, a contract which is not [page 193] evidenced by writing as required by the Statute of Frauds (or derivative legislation) is merely rendered unenforceable, it is not void; whereas the failure to comply with the requirements imposed by other statutes may in fact render the contract void. The failure to follow a statutory requirement may have other consequences as well. For example, the failure to comply with the requirements of the National Credit Code may subject the credit provider to a pecuniary penalty, but no such consequence follows merely from a failure to comply with the requirements derived from the Statute of Frauds.
Compliance with the Requirements Note or Memorandum [9-13] Contents of the document. The Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp) required either the contract to be in writing or the existence of a written ‘memorandum or note’ of the contract. Needless to say, the concept of a memorandum or note of the contract immediately raises the issue of the information which must be contained in the document. The note or memorandum must, generally speaking, contain all the terms of the contract,53 or at least all the ‘essential’ terms.54 Accordingly, the parties to the contract must be identified. The ‘naming of a party is sufficient if he is joined or nominated in the instrument by a sufficiently identifiable description’.55 Second, the note or memorandum must state the consideration for the promise sought to be enforced. For example, in Burgess v Cox56 a contract for the sale of
a holiday camp was agreed, but the note relied on made no reference to the inclusion in the sale of the deposits which had been received by the vendor from prospective guests. The contract was therefore unenforceable. However, in jurisdictions where contracts of guarantee are still subjected to the requirement, statutory provisions specifically allow for the sufficiency of writing which makes no reference to the consideration for the promise sued on.57 Third, the note or memorandum must sufficiently describe the subject matter of the contract. For example, in Pirie v Saunders58 a reference in a document to the sale of ‘part of Lot B, Princes Highway, Sylvania Heights’ was said not to be sufficient. [page 194] Although the note or memorandum will usually come into existence after the contract has been agreed, this is not always the case. For example, a written offer may be orally accepted59 and the offer, ‘by its subsequent acceptance’,60 becomes the note or memorandum. Although the document must recognise the existence of the contract sued on, there is no requirement that it be made for that purpose. For example, in Popiw v Popiw61 an affidavit sworn by the respondent in proceedings which sought a determination of the question whether the applicant was entitled to an interest in the matrimonial home was held to be, in form, a sufficient memorandum of a contract to dispose of an interest in land. The case also illustrates the principle that the document must have been in existence at the time of the proceedings. Since the affidavit was sworn after commencement, fresh proceedings by the applicant were required.62 [9-14] Signature. The concept of ‘signature’ under the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp) is a fairly loose one. The requirement is signature by the party to be charged under the contract or by that person’s agent, ‘lawfully’ authorised.63 However, the courts have interpreted the concept broadly so as not to allow the statute to be the engine of injustice. In Thomson v McInnes64 Griffith CJ said that the statute contemplated ‘three different modes of signature, first, by a person with his own hand, secondly, by an amanuensis signing the name of another person in that other person’s presence by his direction, and, thirdly, by an agent’. Signature by an agent, for example one party’s solicitor,65 will bind that party if the agent has authority to sign. Except in Victoria, in relation to a contract for the disposition of an interest in land, the authority of the agent need
not be in writing.66 Where the name of the party to be charged appears on the alleged note or memorandum, for example, because it was typed in by the other party, the socalled ‘authenticated signature fiction’ may apply. Thus, if the party to be charged expressly or impliedly acknowledges the writing as an authenticated expression of the contract the typed words will be deemed to be his or her signature. But this principle has no application to a document ‘which is not in some way or other recognisable as a note or memorandum of a concluded agreement’.67 [page 195] [9-15] Joinder of documents. The writing may be found in one or more documents: there is no requirement that a single document contain all the evidence.68 In Thomson v McInnes69 Griffith CJ said:70 It is well known that the note or memorandum which the statute requires need not be contained in one piece of paper. It is sufficient if the note signed by the party to be charged refers to some other document in such a way to incorporate it with the document signed, so that they can be read together. That has been settled for a long time. But the whole contract must be shown by the writing. The reference, therefore, in the document signed must be to some other document as such, and not merely to some transaction or event in the course of which another document may or may not have been written.
The document so referred to may be identified by verbal evidence, but the bargain must be completed. For example, in Thomson v McInnes itself, the document referred to contemplated the payment of a deposit under a contract for the sale of land but failed to fix the amount. There was, therefore, no sufficient note or memorandum.71 Subsequent decisions have taken the matter further than the views expressed in Thomson v McInnes would justify. Thus, in Harvey v Edwards Dunlop & Co Ltd72 the High Court proceeded on the basis that a reference to some other ‘transaction’ is sufficient if the transaction contains all the terms in writing. Direct reference in one document to another is therefore not essential. For example, the later document may refer to an agreement the effect of which can be explained by oral evidence. Similarly, in Elias v George Sahely & Co (Barbados) Ltd73 the Privy Council approved a statement in Timmins v Moreland Street Property Co Ltd74 to the effect that once the required memorandum contains some reference, express or implied, to some other document or
transaction, evidence may be given to identify the other document, or explain the other transaction, and to identify any document relating to it. If the oral evidence leads to another document which, when placed side by side with the later document, indicates a connection between them, that is sufficient.75
Sale of Goods [9-16] Note or memorandum. The issues likely to be raised in relation to the note or memorandum required under the sale of goods legislation will appear from the above discussion. The important point with regard to the sale of goods contract is that writing is only one of a number of possible ways in which the statute may be satisfied. Of course, if the sale of goods [page 196] contract happens to come within the classes of contract discussed above, for example, because it is not to be performed within the space of one year, there must be writing because the alternative methods of satisfying the requirement specified in the sale of goods legislation will not be available.76 [9-17] Acceptance of goods. Under the definition of acceptance in the sale of goods legislation77 the crucial question is whether the buyer has done any act in relation to the goods which recognises a pre-existing contract of sale. This is a question of fact.78 If a buyer actually receives goods the subject of an oral contract of sale, and treats the goods as his or her own property, they will be regarded as ‘accepted’ as required by legislation.79 Words or conduct of a more equivocal nature may, on the facts of a particular case, constitute acceptance. But what if the goods which have been ‘accepted’ were not delivered pursuant to the contract sued on? The matter arose in Metropolitan Knitting and Hosiery Co Ltd v Thomas Burnley & Sons Ltd (in liq)80 where an action was brought on two contracts of sale one of which was denied by the defendants who raised the defence that s 17 of the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp), which was then in force, had not been complied with. In their pleadings the plaintiffs alleged ‘acceptance’ of part of the goods and the trial judge directed the jury that in order to satisfy the statute the plaintiffs had to show that the goods were accepted under the contract sought to
be enforced, and not under the contract which had been denied by the defendants. A majority of the High Court considered that this direction was proper, and agreed that an honest belief by the defendants that they were receiving goods under some contract other than that sued on was material. On the other hand, Isaacs J considered81 that the word ‘act’ in the legislative description of acceptance excluded ‘secret qualification and undisclosed error’ and emphasised the objectivity of the provision. Moreover, in his view82 the only ‘recognition’ of a contract required by acceptance was the recognition under ‘some contract of sale’ between the parties. [9-18] Earnest and part payment. Enforcement of an oral contract for the sale of goods will be possible if the buyer gives something ‘in earnest to bind the contract, or in part payment’. Although not restricted to monetary payments, a clear example of the former is the payment of a monetary deposit, that is, a payment made at the time of formation in order to show the genuineness of the buyer. It is a sum of money which is liable to be [page 197] forfeited to the seller if the contract goes off without default on the seller’s part.83 Although a deposit is almost invariably credited towards the payment of the price of the goods, it is distinguishable from a pure part payment by reason of the fact that it is normally subject to forfeiture in the event of the payer’s default.84 A part payment may be made in advance, but is more frequently made in exchange for the goods. The relation between deposits and part payments was considered by Wright J in Farr Smith & Co Ltd v Messers Ltd.85 A contract for the sale of a quantity of wood was repudiated by the sellers before delivery. The buyers had promised to make payments by way of cash and bills of exchange and they relied on this as something given in earnest, to bind the contract. Alternatively, they relied on the payment later received by the sellers by virtue of the bills of exchange. Wright J considered that nothing had been given in ‘earnest’. He said86 that an earnest must be a ‘tangible thing’ given ‘at the moment when the contract is concluded’, as a ‘guarantee’ that the buyer will fulfil the contract. Clearly, the plaintiffs had given nothing in earnest on the facts of this case; but, equally clearly, their payment constituted a payment under the contract. The defence based on s 4 of the Sale of Goods Act 1893 (UK)87 therefore failed. The case indicates that a
buyer’s promise to pay the price of the goods the subject of the contract does not amount either to an earnest or a part payment.
Effect of Noncompliance Impact on Common Law [9-19] Contract unenforceable but not void. Until the middle of the 19th century the prevailing view was that noncompliance with the requirements of the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp) rendered the contract void.88 However, it is now accepted that the contract is unenforceable but not void. This is true in respect of both s 4 and s 17 and their modern equivalents. Thus, their effect is said to be ‘procedural’,89 preventing any action on the contract but not denying its existence. Clearly, an action for damages for breach of contract is not possible because such an action is brought directly on the contract. In the language of s 4, the plaintiff would be seeking to ‘charge’ the defendant on the contract. But it is also true that if money has been paid under a contract which does not comply with the requirement of writing and is therefore unenforceable, the ‘payee may rely upon such contract to protect his position against a plaintiff seeking to establish some countervailing claim’.90 Where a contract contains several promises, some but not all of which are required to be evidenced by writing, the absence of a written note or [page 198] memorandum renders the whole contract unenforceable unless the promises are severable. In this context91 ‘severable’ means that the promises are ‘not only themselves severable but may be referred to and supported by independent or divisible considerations or divisible parts of a consideration capable of distribution’.92 In other words, the plaintiff must show that the promise being enforced is not one required to be evidenced by writing, and that the form of the contract is such that the consideration for this promise is separate from the consideration supporting the unenforceable promises. [9-20] Claims dehors the contract. A plaintiff who is unable to sue on a
contract because of noncompliance with the formal requirements applicable is not necessarily precluded from obtaining relief on a claim which is independent of the contract. In Horton v Jones93 Jordan CJ said94 that if ‘a person does acts for the benefit of another in the performance of a contract which is unenforceable’ by reason of the statute, and the other ‘accepts the benefit of those acts’, an action in restitution to ‘obtain reasonable remuneration’ will be available. This approach was approved by the High Court in Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul.95 In that case Pavey & Matthews (the builder) sued Ms Paul to recover a reasonable sum for work done and materials supplied at her request. The defence was that s 45 of the Builders Licensing Act 1971 (NSW) made the building contract, under which the work was done, unenforceable. It required any building contract under which the builder, as holder of a licence under the Act, undertook to carry out any building work (or to vary any building work or the manner of carrying out any building work) to be in writing and signed by each of the parties. It declared unenforceable against the other party to the contract any contract which did not comply with s 45. The defence was tried by Clarke J as a separate preliminary issue on certain agreed facts including that the contract was unenforceable by reason of noncompliance with s 45. He decided the issue in favour of the builder, but an appeal to the New South Wales Court of Appeal was allowed.96 A further appeal to the High Court was (by majority) allowed. It is important to notice that the claim was not brought on the contract. Such a claim was clearly prohibited. Rather, the action was a restitutionary claim for ‘reasonable remuneration’ (described as a ‘quantum meruit’) based, so the High Court held, on unjust enrichment.97 The obligation to [page 199] pay a reasonable sum was not contractual in nature, it was an obligation imposed by law, and s 45 was held not to apply to such a claim. Thus, although no action on the contract was available, an action to recover the reasonable value of the services rendered was available. The High Court did not see this decision as frustrating the purpose of the section, that is, to provide protection for a building owner.98 As Deane J said:99 The building owner remains entitled to enforce the contract. He cannot, however, be forced either to comply with its terms or to permit the builder to carry it to completion. All that he can be required to do is to pay reasonable compensation for work done of which he has received the benefit and for
which in justice he is obligated to make such a payment by way of restitution. In relation to such work, he can rely on the contract, if it has not been rescinded, as to the amount of remuneration and the terms of payment. If the agreed remuneration exceeds what is reasonable in the circumstances, he can rely on the unenforceability of the contract with the result that he is liable to pay no more than what is fair and reasonable.
Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul shows that a plaintiff is entitled to recover in respect of a fully performed but unenforceable contract. The action is for restitution and the price specified in the contract is evidence of the plaintiff’s entitlement.100 However, if performance is only partial, recovery will not usually be possible. Recovery of the reasonable value of work done as restitution is, however, open where the defendant has accepted the benefit of the work, and the contract has been rescinded or discharged. The usual situation is where the plaintiff has validly terminated the contract, for example, because of a serious breach or repudiation by the defendant.101 It is essential that the policy behind the statutory requirement of writing be considered. In Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul the conclusion was that this did not extend to a claim in restitution. However, there may be situations in which the policy of the statute requires a different conclusion.102
Position in Equity103 [9-21] Doctrine of part performance. Rigid adherence to the common law position, even allowing for restitutionary claims discussed above,104 and for the fairly generous interpretation of concepts such as signature,105 would cause injustice and allow requirements of writing derived from the [page 200] Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp) to protect fraudulent persons. It was not long106 before equity developed what is known as the ‘doctrine of part performance’.107 Where the plaintiff establishes sufficient acts of part performance to justify equitable intervention notwithstanding that the contract is oral, the defendant is, as Lord Selborne LC explained in Maddison v Alderson,108 ‘“charged” upon the equities resulting from the acts done in execution of the Contract, and not (within the meaning of the statute) upon the contract itself’. In such a case the ‘equity’ which arises is to have the ‘entire contract carried into execution by both
sides’.109 The reason for equitable intervention, in the face of the statute, is that the acts of part performance make it unconscientious for the defendant to plead the statute as a bar to the plaintiff’s claim.110 The concern is, therefore, with conduct which renders it inequitable or unconscionable for the defendant to rely on the statute. Of course, if the court is to intervene, by ordering specific performance of the oral contract, the contract must be amenable to relief by specific performance.111 For example, if personal services are involved, specific performance may not be ordered even if part performance is established.112 Although the doctrine of part performance has fairly recently been considered by both the House of Lords113 and the High Court,114 there is still uncertainty as to the requirements of the doctrine. For example, there seems to be a conflict of opinion in Australia on the order in which matters are considered. Glass JA said in Millett v Regent115 that the ‘accepted practice is to deal with the unwritten contract first and then to consider the acts of part performance, disregarding the oral agreement’. Support for Glass JA’s opinion can be found in Steadman v Steadman,116 but it is contrary to Thwaites v Ryan.117 [page 201] Three principal issues arise and are dealt with below.118 However, part performance should not be seen as the only qualification to the operation of the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp). It is now clear that estoppel may have the same effect as part performance, namely, the availability of specific performance where there is no legally enforceable contract.119 [9-22] Referability. The first issue is referability. To what extent must the acts relied upon as part performance be referable to the contract sued on? In Maddison v Alderson120 Lord Selborne LC said that the ‘acts relied upon as part performance must be unequivocally and in their own nature, referable to some such contract as that alleged’. There are two aspects to this classic statement. There is a requirement that the acts be ‘unequivocal’; and a requirement of referability to ‘some such contract’, not simply ‘a contract’. Although the ‘unequivocal’ act requirement has generally been insisted on,121 it is doubtful whether the word has been literally interpreted. And the requirement of ‘some such contract’, although insisted on in many High Court decisions,122
was rejected by a majority of the House of Lords in Steadman v Steadman,123 a decision which indicates that it is impossible to keep the two aspects of referability distinct from one another. In Steadman v Steadman an agreement was reached under which the plaintiff agreed to surrender her interest in a house, which was owned jointly by herself and the defendant, to the defendant. It was also agreed: that a maintenance order in favour of the plaintiff should be discharged; that a maintenance order for a child of the marriage should continue; and that arrears of maintenance should be remitted save for a sum of £100 which was subsequently paid by the defendant. When the plaintiff refused to sign a transfer of the house the defendant relied on the following facts as part performance justifying an order for specific performance: (1) payment of the £100; (2) intimation of the agreement to the magistrate’s court and the abandonment of attempts to have all arrears of maintenance remitted; and (3) the dispatch to the plaintiff’s solicitor of the transfer which the plaintiff refused to sign and the cost of its preparation. A majority held that sufficient part performance was established and specific performance was therefore ordered. This would seem to have been on the basis that referability requires that the acts of part performance, when considered in the light of the circumstances of the case, point to some contract between the parties on the balance of probabilities, [page 202] and indicate the nature of the oral agreement alleged or consistent with it.124 This is wider than the requirement, traditionally applied in Australia, that the acts be referable to some such contract as that alleged, that is (broadly) a contract relating to land. Accordingly, in the absence of High Court approval of Steadman, Australian courts have continued to insist on the traditional requirement.125 Moreover, the House of Lords treated the payment of money as an act of part performance notwithstanding that payment, even of the full purchase price of land, has in the past been regarded as an equivocal act.126 Whatever formulation of the requirement of referability is preferred, it must not be forgotten that each case will depend on its own facts and that different conclusions may result notwithstanding a similarity of the acts relied upon. For
example, in McBride v Sandland127 the taking of possession of land was held not to be sufficient part performance. On the other hand, in Regent v Millett128 purchasers of land relied on the following acts as part performance under an oral contract for the sale of land: the taking of possession; the fact that they had effected repairs to improvements on the land; renovations and additions to the improvements; and the making of mortgage payments. The High Court held that the giving and taking of possession was itself sufficient part performance. McBride v Sandland was distinguished on the ground that in that case the taking of possession was ‘referable to some authority other than the contract alleged’.129 In that case, the possession taken by the defendant (and her husband) was referable to a lease between the plaintiff and the defendant’s husband, and not referable to an option to purchase the land in respect of which part performance was alleged. A lessee’s continuation in possession of land may be evidence of part performance of an agreement for a lease, but not if the lessee continues to pay the same rent because that renders the act equivocal.130 Where the same rent is paid the position may be simply that the lessor has made a decision not to recover possession; but an increase in rent is some evidence of fresh agreement. [9-23] Performance of the contract. The second issue is this: to what extent must the acts relied on be performance of the contract? In J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey131 Dixon J said that the acts must have been done in ‘actual performance’ of the contract which in fact existed between [page 203] the parties. Clearly, this excludes acts which have been done but were not part of the contract. Thus, preparatory acts, such as the preparation of the assignment of a lease, have been held not to be sufficient.132 It would also exclude acts which might otherwise be unequivocal such as a taking of possession of land where the contract does not require this. But in Regent v Millett133 the High Court considered that the taking of possession was a sufficient act even though the contract did not require it. The court said134 that the ‘utility of the equitable doctrine would be reduced to vanishing point’ if it were necessary for the acts to
be ‘in compliance with a requirement of the contract’. Thus, it may be that it is sufficient for the act to be done pursuant to the contract even though the act is not ‘required’. The High Court leftopen the position with regard to an act which is neither required nor permitted by the contract. In the New South Wales Court of Appeal there had been a difference of opinion. Hutley JA had expressed the view135 that if acts are done which unequivocally point to a contract the doctrine of part performance should be applicable, ‘if other conditions are fulfilled’, even though the acts are ‘neither required by the contract nor … expressly authorised’, provided they are done in consequence of the agreement. On the other hand, Glass JA said136 that acts done in consequence of the oral agreement, ‘but not in execution of it, are excluded from consideration’, because they are neither required nor authorised by the agreement. The third member of the court, Mahoney JA, expressed no view on the matter. [9-24] Scope of the doctrine. Most of the cases on the doctrine of part performance involve contracts relating to land. Clearly, its main application is to such contracts and the modern statutory provisions derived from s 4 of the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp) expressly preserve the doctrine in that context.137 The reason the doctrine has been discussed mainly in the context of contracts involving land is that the remedy of specific performance, so important in the context of the doctrine, has its main application to such contracts. But a third issue in relation to part performance is whether it applies beyond land contracts. The doctrine has been discussed, if not actually applied, in the context of other types of contracts138 and there is no reason, in principle, for not applying the doctrine outside the context of land if specific performance is available.139 Of course, the diminished [page 204] importance of formal requirements outside the context of land means that the issue is not particularly important in practice. The doctrine of part performance has one important limitation, namely, it cannot be used to found an action for common law damages for breach of contract.140
Rescission, Variation and Related
Concepts [9-25] When variation must be written. Where a contract is not required to be evidenced by writing any variation of the terms of the contract may be made by a purely oral agreement.141 However, where there is such a requirement the variation must also be so evidenced because the writing must contain all the terms. If the variation is purely oral it cannot, subject perhaps to the doctrine of part performance, be enforced and the ‘original contract in writing stands unaffected’.142 In British & Beningtons Ltd v North Western Cachar Tea Co Ltd143 several contracts for the sale of tea required delivery to be made in London. Because of congestion in the Port of London the vessels carrying the tea were diverted to various other ports and the ensuing delay was the subject of disputes between the parties to the contracts. An oral agreement was alleged to have then been made under which the buyers agreed to take delivery, at the ports where the tea had been discharged, in return for a reduction in price. This was an oral variation of the written contracts which existed and was unenforceable by reason of s 4 of the Sale of Goods Act 1893 (UK) which was in force at the time. Accordingly, the contracts had to be enforced in their original, unaltered, form. [9-26] Variation distinguished from rescission. Although a variation of a contract required to be evidenced by writing must be similarly evidenced, the contract may be validly rescinded by an oral agreement. An agreement to rescind discharges the parties from the duty to perform their contractual obligations. It may replace the obligations with a set of new obligations, in which case that contract will probably need to be evidenced by writing. If there is no such fresh agreement, or it is unenforceable because it is not in writing or evidenced by writing, the parties are still [page 205] discharged and the consequences which flow from rescission are implied by law.144 Rescission may take place by reason of express or implied agreement.145 In Morris v Baron & Co146 an action was brought to recover the price of goods sold and delivered by the plaintiff to the defendants. The defendants conceded the claim but made a counter-claim, alleging non-delivery of other
goods. This was based alternatively on the original contract and an agreement reached in settlement of a previous action between the parties. The settlement contract did not comply with s 4 of the Sale of Goods Act 1893 (UK) and, on the assumption that it should have complied with that provision, was held to be unenforceable. So far as the distinction between rescission and variation is concerned, Viscount Haldane said147 it is ‘essential’, if the agreement is to amount to a complete rescission, ‘that there should have been made manifest the intention in any event of a complete extinction of the first and formal contract, and not merely the desire of an alteration, however sweeping, in terms which still leave it subsisting’. In this case the parties had agreed to discharge the original contract and to replace it with a fresh set of obligations with the result that neither the original agreement nor the substituted agreement could be the basis for an action by the defendants. Unless the parties have expressly stated that their prior agreement is to be ‘terminated’, ‘rescinded’, ‘abrogated’, ‘abandoned’, ‘discharged’, or have used some similar expression, it may be difficult to decide whether the subsequent agreement is a mere variation or a rescission. In Morris v Baron & Co various tests were suggested, such as inquiring whether the two agreements deal with the same subject matter in such a way that it is impossible for both to be performed, or whether the subsequent contract is inconsistent to an extent which goes to the ‘root’ of the prior contract. In Tallerman & Co Pty Ltd v Nathan’s Merchandise (Victoria) Pty Ltd148 Dixon CJ and Fullagar J expressed the view that the distinction between variation and rescission is not a satisfactory one. Similarly, in United Dominions Corp (Jamaica) Ltd v Shoucair149 Lord Devlin, when delivering the advice of the Privy Council in that case, admitted that logic might dictate the interpretation of even a minor contractual variation as the rescission of the prior contract and the substitution of a new contract. He recognised that this view had been rejected in Morris v Baron & Co for the very sensible reason that it would not accord with the intention of the parties, assuming the variation to be purely oral, for there to be no enforceable agreement between them. This leads to the proposition that in considering the effect of a subsequent oral agreement it is always material to examine the intention of the parties and, in particular, to ask whether they intend the prior contract to be rescinded if the subsequent contract is unenforceable. In other words, if the parties’ agreement for rescission is [page 206]
contingent on the substitution of a new and enforceable contract, the rescission will not take effect if the subsequent agreement is unenforceable by reason of a statutory requirement of writing.150 It was on this basis that a variation of the rate of interest payable on a loan was held not to extinguish the prior debt and mortgage in the United Dominions case. [9-27] Variation distinguished from forbearance and related concepts. The fact that an oral variation of a contract required to be evidenced by writing is unenforceable has given rise to some artificial distinctions designed to prevent the statutory requirement causing obvious injustice. A decision which indicates the kinds of distinctions which have been drawn is Hartley v Hymans.151 A contract for the sale of goods required delivery to be made, at a specified rate per week, starting in the month of September and being completed by 15 November. In fact, deliveries commenced on 29 November, but the buyer, while complaining of delay, urged the seller to deliver, and accepted two deliveries in December and one in the following February. However, in March the buyer purported to cancel the contract on the ground of late delivery and the seller sued to recover damages for the buyer’s refusal to accept the balance of the goods. McCardie J held that time had originally been of the essence of the contract,152 which meant that the buyer could have terminated the performance of the contract when delivery did not commence by the required date.153 It was held, however, that the buyer had in fact ‘waived’ the right to insist that the contract period ended on 15 November, that is, elected154 not to terminate, and that as this was evidenced by writing the seller was able to succeed in his action. Alternatively, McCardie J held: (1) that the buyer was estopped155 from saying that the period for delivery had expired; and (2) that a new agreement could be implied, from the letters which passed between the parties, extending the period for delivery. But in the course of reaching those conclusions it was also said that a party’s election in favour of a right will be effective even if oral, as it does not involve a variation of the contract. The position will be different where the conduct goes further. For example, if its effect is to substitute a different term in the contract writing will be required.156 It is also established that estoppel may be purely oral for the reason that it does not vary the contract but, instead, disentitles parties, such as the buyer in Hartley v Hymans, from relying on their strict legal rights.157 [page 207]
A distinction is drawn between a variation of the terms of the contract and an arrangement in relation to the mode or manner of performance. It is well established that no writing is required for the latter.158 For example, a forbearance by one party in the performance of a contract, such as a seller’s forbearance to deliver at the request of the buyer, is effective, even if purely oral, to prevent insistence on the original delivery date, provided there is sufficient evidence.159 Therefore, in the example just given, even though there is no variation of the terms of the contract, the buyer is not entitled to sue the seller for not delivering at the appointed time, and cannot refuse to take delivery on the ground that the goods have not been delivered at the time stipulated in the contract. 1.
Or the intention of the parties. See [5-02]–[5-06] (‘subject to contract’).
2.
See [9-13]–[9-16].
3.
See [9-11].
4.
See [9-21]–[9-24].
5.
See Actionstrength Ltd v International Glass Engineering IN.GL.EN Spa [2003] 2 AC 541 at 544–5, 549.
6.
See, eg Suttor v Gundowda Pty Ltd (1950) 81 CLR 418 at 440.
7.
Marginson v Ian Potter & Co (1976) 136 CLR 161 at 168; 11 ALR 64.
8.
Marginson v Ian Potter & Co (1976) 136 CLR 161 at 168–9.
9.
Simpson, A History of the Common Law of Contract, 1975, p 610.
10.
See [6-06] and Simpson, A History of the Common Law of Contract, 1975, pp 617–19.
11.
See [9-19].
12.
For derivative legislation see [9-11].
13.
ACT: Imperial Acts (Substituted Provisions) Act 1986, s 3(1) and Sch 1; NSW: Imperial Acts Application Act 1969, s 8(1); NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 221(1) and Sch 4; Qld: Statute of Frauds 1972, s 3 (itself repealed by the Property Law Act 1974); SA: Statutes Amendment (Enforcement of Contracts) Act 1982, ss 3 and 4.
14.
See Mercantile Law Act 1935 (Tas), s 6.
15.
ACT: Imperial Acts (Substituted Provisions) Act 1986, s 3(1) and Sch 1; NSW: Imperial Acts Application Act 1969, s 8(1); NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 221(1) and Sch 4; Qld: Statute of Frauds 1972, s 3 (itself repealed by the Property Law Act 1974); SA: Statutes Amendment (Enforcement of Contracts) Act 1982, s 3; Vic: Instruments Act 1958, s 126; WA: Law Reform (Statute of Frauds) Act 1962, s 2.
16.
For a wider interpretation see Moschi v Lep Air Services Ltd [1973] AC 331 at 347–8.
17.
See NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 58; Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 56; Tas: Mercantile Law Act 1935, s 6; Vic: Instruments Act 1958, s 126; WA: Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp), s 4 (as affected by (WA) Law Reform (Statute of Frauds) Act 1962, s 2). The wording of the Northern Territory and Queensland provisions are in a simplified form, employing the word ‘guarantee’.
18.
See ACT: Imperial Acts (Substituted Provisions) Act 1986, s 3 and Sch 2, Pt 11, cl 4(1); NSW:
Imperial Acts Application Act 1969, s 8(1); SA: Statutes Amendment (Enforcement of Contracts) Act 1982, s 3. But see [9-12] (consumer credit). 19.
[1973] AC 331.
20.
[1973] AC 331 at 348. Cf at 344–5.
21.
(1704) 1 Salk 27; 91 ER 27.
22.
[1961] 1 WLR 828. For a more recent example see Pitts v Jones [2008] 1 QB 706; [2007] EWCA Civ 1301. See also Bofinger v Kingsway Group Ltd (2009) 239 CLR 269 at 280; 260 ALR 71 at 74; [2009] HCA 44 at [7].
23.
See, eg Hortico (Australia) Pty Ltd v Energy Equipment Co (Australia) Pty Ltd (1985) 1 NSWLR 545 at 550; Sunbird Plaza Pty Ltd v Maloney (1988) 166 CLR 245; 77 ALR 205.
24.
Marginson v Ian Potter & Co (1976) 136 CLR 161.
25.
See Mercantile Law Act 1935 (Tas), s 6.
26.
ACT: Imperial Acts (Substituted Provisions) Act 1986, s 3 and Sch 2, Pt 11, cl 4(1); NSW: Imperial Acts Application Act 1969, s 8(1); NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 221(1) and Sch 4; Qld: Statute of Frauds 1972, s 3 (itself repealed by the Property Law Act 1974); SA: Statutes Amendment (Enforcement of Contracts) Act 1982, s 3; Vic: Instruments Act 1958, s 126; WA: Law Reform (Statute of Frauds) Act 1962, s 2.
27.
In any event, by virtue of s 111A of the Marriage Act 1961 (Cth) breach of such a promise does not give rise to a liability to pay damages.
28.
On whether a land contract must be in writing see Marist Brothers Community Inc v Shire of Harvey (1994) 14 WAR 69; Sorna Pty Ltd v Flint (2000) 21 WAR 563 at 566; Khoury v Khouri (2006) 66 NSWLR 241; [2006] NSWCA 184. See Nicholas Seddon, ‘Contracts for the Sale of Land: Is a Note or Memorandum Sufficient?’ (1987) 61 ALJ 406.
29.
See also ACT: Civil Law (Property) Act 2006, s 204(1); NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 62; Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 59; SA: Law of Property Act 1936, s 26(1); Tas: Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1884, s 36(1); Vic: Instruments Act 1958, s 126; WA: Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp), s 4 (as affected by Law Reform (Statute of Frauds) Act 1962 (WA), s 2).
30.
In England, Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 (UK), s 2 (repealing s 40 of the Law of Property Act 1925 (UK)) provides that the contract must be in writing.
31.
See [9-21]–[9-24].
32.
See Mercantile Law Act 1935 (Tas), s 6.
33.
See ACT: Imperial Acts (Substituted Provisions) Act 1986, s 3 and Sch 2, Pt 11, cl 4(1); NSW: Imperial Acts Application Act 1969, s 8(1); NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 221(1) and Sch 4; Qld: Statute of Frauds 1972, s 3 (itself repealed by the Property Law Act 1974); SA: Statutes Amendment (Enforcement of Contracts) Act 1982, s 3; Vic: Instruments Act 1958, s 126; WA: Law Reform (Statute of Frauds) Act 1962, s 2.
34.
(1949) 78 CLR 646 at 653. And see Gibb v Sell [1922] VLR 561.
35.
Repeal of the Western Australian provision has been recommended by the Law Reform Commission of Western Australia, Report on the Sale of Goods Act 1895, Project No 89, 1998. See J W Carter, ‘Sale of Goods Reform in Western Australia’ (1999) 15 JCL 58.
36.
See ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1975, s 3; NSW: Sale of Goods (Amendment) Act 1988, s3 and Sch1, cl2; NT: Sale of Goods Amendment Act 1999, s 2; Qld: Statute of Frauds 1972, s 3 (itself repealed by the Property Law Act 1974); SA: Statutes Amendment (Enforcement of Contracts) 1982, s 4; Vic: Sale of Goods (Vienna Convention) Act 1987, s 9. No requirement of writing applies to contracts of sale governed by the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods
1980. 37.
Under the Uniform Commercial Code (US), §2-201(1) the threshold is $5000.
38.
This definition distinguishes acceptance in performance (see [31-15]). Under s 17 of the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp) there was no definition of acceptance. The definition codifies the previous law on acceptance. See Metropolitan Knitting and Hosiery Co Ltd v Thomas Burnley & Sons Ltd (in liq) (1924) 35 CLR 232 at 240. See further [9-17].
39.
See also Sale of Goods Act 1895 (WA), s 60(1).
40.
On the distinction between sale of an interest in land and a sale of goods see, eg Mills v Stokman (1967) 116 CLR 61; Warren v Nut Farms of Australia Pty Ltd [1980] WAR 136.
41.
See Toby Constructions Products Pty Ltd v Computa Bar (Sales) Pty Ltd [1983] 2 NSWLR 48.
42.
See St Albans City and District Council v International Computers Ltd [1996] 4 All ER 481; Gammasonics Institute for Medical Research Pty Ltd v Comrad Medical Systems Pty Ltd (2010) 77 NSWLR 479 at 489; [2010] NSWSC 267 at [46]. Contrast the position under the Australian Consumer Law, s 2(1).
43.
[1935] 1 KB 579 at 587.
44.
See Collins Trading Co Pty Ltd v Maher [1969] VR 20; Bolwell Fibreglass Pty Ltd v Foley [1984] VR 97 at 108–9.
45.
Robinson v Graves [1935] 1 KB 579.
46.
Samuels v Davis [1943] 1 KB 526 at 529.
47.
Brooks Robinson Pty Ltd v Rothfield [1951] VLR 405.
48.
Aristoc Industries Pty Ltd v R A Wenham (Builders) Pty Ltd [1965] NSWR 581.
49.
Hewett v Court (1983) 149 CLR 639; 46 ALR 87.
50.
Young & Marten Ltd v McManus Childs Ltd [1969] 1 AC 454 at 476.
51.
Hewett v Court (1983) 149 CLR 639 at 646, 655.
52.
See [9-19]–[9-24].
53.
Sinclair Scott & Co Ltd v Naughton (1929) 43 CLR 310 at 318. This is the position under Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 (UK), s 2(1).
54.
Harvey v Edwards Dunlop & Co Ltd (1927) 39 CLR 302 at 307.
55.
Di Biase v Rezek [1971] 1 NSWLR 735 at 741–2.
56.
[1951] Ch 383. It would seem that Harman J’s refusal in this case to grant relief claimed in favour of a party willing to submit to the omitted term was wrong: Scott v Bradley [1971] Ch 850.
57.
See NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 58(2); Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 56(2); Tas: Mercantile Law Act 1935, s 12; Vic: Instruments Act 1958, s 129; WA: Mercantile Law Amendment Act 1856 (UK), s 3 (adopted by 31 Vic No 8).
58.
(1961) 104 CLR 149.
59.
Heppingstone v Stewart (1910) 12 CLR 126. But see Howard Smith & Co Ltd v Varawa (1907) 5 CLR 68 at 79.
60.
Pirie v Saunders (1961) 104 CLR 149 at 154.
61.
[1959] VR 197. See also Elpis Maritime Co Ltd v Marti Chartering Co Inc (The Maria D) [1992] 1 AC 21; Tonitto v Bassal (1992) 28 NSWLR 564.
62.
See also South Coast Oils (Qld & NSW) Pty Ltd v Look Enterprises Pty Ltd [1988] 1 Qd R 680 at
690–1. 63.
Contrast Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 (UK), s 2(3) (signature by both parties).
64.
(1911) 12 CLR 562 at 573.
65.
See, eg Kalnenas v Kovacevich [1961] WAR 188; Elias v George Sahely & Co (Barbados) Ltd [1983] 1 AC 646.
66.
See s 126 of the Instruments Act 1958 (Vic). See Grummitt v Natalisio [1968] VR 156; Collin v Holden [1989] VR 510; Futuretronics International Pty Ltd v Gadzhis (1990) [1992] 2 VR 217. See also Civil Law (Property) Act 2006 (ACT), s 204(1).
67.
Pirie v Saunders (1961) 104 CLR 149 at 154. See also Neill v Hewens (1953) 89 CLR 1.
68.
Tonitto v Bassal (1992) 28 NSWLR 564.
69.
(1911) 12 CLR 562.
70.
(1911) 12 CLR 562 at 569.
71.
See also Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Widin (1990) 102 ALR 289 at 300 (document did not refer to transaction).
72.
(1927) 39 CLR 302 at 307. See also Ellul v Oakes (1972) 3 SASR 377 at 383; Woden Squash Courts Pty Ltd v Zero Builders Pty Ltd [1976] 2 NSWLR 212. Cf Tonitto v Bassal (1992) 28 NSWLR 564. Contrast Di Biase v Rezek [1971] 1 NSWLR 735.
73.
[1983] 1 AC 646 at 655.
74.
[1958] 1 Ch 110 at 130.
75.
Burgess v Cox [1951] Ch 383 at 388.
76.
For illustrative purposes reference can be made to the following cases which deal with the requirement of writing in relation to sale of goods: Cohen v Roche [1927] 1 KB 169 (signature); Farr Smith & Co Ltd v Messers Ltd [1928] 1 KB 397 (signature by agent); Parbury Henty & Co Pty Ltd v General Engineering & Agencies Pty Ltd (1973) 47 ALJR 336 (contract acknowledged by letter).
77.
See [9-11].
78.
Metropolitan Knitting and Hosiery Co Ltd v Thomas Burnley & Sons Ltd (in liq) (1924) 35 CLR 232 at 243.
79.
For an illustration see Deta Nominees Pty Ltd v Viscount Plastic Products Pty Ltd [1979] VR 167.
80.
(1924) 35 CLR 232.
81.
(1924) 35 CLR 232 at 240.
82.
(1924) 35 CLR 232 at 242.
83.
See also [37-36].
84.
See [38-33].
85.
[1928] 1 KB 397.
86.
[1928] 1 KB 397 at 408.
87.
There is no such requirement under the Sale of Goods Act 1979 (UK).
88.
See, eg Birkmyr v Darnell (1704) 1 Salk 27; 91 ER 27; and see Simpson, A History of the Common Law of Contract, 1975, pp 609, 612–13.
89.
See, eg Popiw v Popiw [1959] VR 197 at 200.
90.
Head v Kelk (1963) 63 SR (NSW) 340 at 348. See also Lejo Holdings Pty Ltd v Deutsche Bank (Asia) AG [1988] 2 Qd R 30 at 43. Cf Perpetual Executors and Trustees Association of Australia Ltd v Russell (1931) 45 CLR 146. See Mason and Carter, Restitution Law in Australia, 1995, para 1019.
91.
See also [4-15], [27-29]–[27-39].
92.
Horton v Jones (1935) 53 CLR 475 at 485. See also Collin v Holden [1989] VR 510 at 512–13.
93.
(1934) 34 SR (NSW) 359.
94.
(1934) 34 SR (NSW) 359 at 367 (affirmed on other grounds (1935) 53 CLR 475).
95.
(1987) 162 CLR 221 at 250; 69 ALR 577. See also Phillips v Ellinson Bros Pty Ltd (1941) 65 CLR 221 at 246.
96.
See (1985) 3 NSWLR 114.
97.
See further [38-08].
98.
Brennan J (dissenting) considered that the protective function of s 45 would have been frustrated by a decision in the builder’s favour.
99.
(1987) 162 CLR 221 at 263. See also Gino D’Alessandro Constructions Pty Ltd v Powis [1987] 2 Qd R 40. Cf Fablo Pty Ltd v Bloore [1983] 1 Qd R 107.
100. See Horton v Jones (1934) 34 SR (NSW) 359 at 367–8 (affirmed on other grounds (1935) 53 CLR 475); and further [38-37], [38-38]. 101. See Matthes v Carter (1955) 55 SR (NSW) 357 and generally Mason and Carter, Restitution Law in Australia, 1995, paras 1031–1032. 102. See, eg Sevastopoulos v Spanos [1991] 2 VR 194. 103. See Spry, Equitable Remedies, 7th ed, 2007, pp 254–88. 104. See [9-20]. 105. See Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Widin (1990) 102 ALR 289 at 301. 106. The origins are far from clear. See Simpson, A History of the Common Law of Contract, 1975, pp 613–16. 107. The doctrine no longer applies in England because the Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 (UK), s 2 states that a contract for the sale or other disposition of an interest in land can only be made in writing. But cf s 2(5) (saving of constructive trusts) and see Butler v Craine [1986] VR 274. 108. (1883) 8 App Cas 467 at 475. See also McBride v Sandland (1918) 25 CLR 69 at 77; Ash Street Properties Pty Ltd v Pollnow (1987) 9 NSWLR 80 at 84, 101; McMahon v Ambrose [1987] VR 817 at 851. 109. J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey (1931) 45 CLR 282 at 300. 110. See Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, para 20-225. 111. See generally [39-03]. 112. See, eg Maiden v Maiden (1909) 7 CLR 727 at 737. 113. Steadman v Steadman [1976] AC 536 (see [9-22]). 114. Regent v Millett (1976) 133 CLR 679; 10 ALR 496 (see [9-22]). 115. [1975] 1 NSWLR 62 at 73 (affirmed without reference to the point sub nom Regent v Millett (1976) 133 CLR 679).
116. [1976] AC 536 at 556. See also Watson v Delaney (1991) 22 NSWLR 358 at 363 (‘tentative preference’ for the view). 117. [1984] VR 65 at 77, followed in Riley v Osbourne [1986] VR 193 at 198–9 (reluctantly); Butler v Craine [1986] VR 274 at 282. Cf McMahon v Ambrose [1987] VR 817 at 846–7. 118. See [9-22]–[9-24]. 119. See Riches v Hogben [1985] 2 Qd R 292 (affirmed [1986] 1 Qd R 315); Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher (1988) 164 CLR 387; 76 ALR 513 (see [7-12]); Collin v Holden [1989] VR 510. Contrast Actionstrength Ltd v International Glass Engineering IN.GL.EN Spa [2003] 2 AC 541 (see Andrew Robertson (2003) 19 JCL 173). For discussion see K G Nicholson, ‘Riches v Hogben: Part Performance and the Doctrines of Equitable and Proprietary Estoppel’ (1986) 60 ALJ 345. 120. (1883) 8 App Cas 467 at 479. See also Cooney v Burns (1922) 30 CLR 216 at 243. 121. See, eg McBride v Sandland (1918) 25 CLR 69 at 78. 122. See, eg McBride v Sandland (1918) 25 CLR 69; J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey (1931) 45 CLR 282. 123. [1976] AC 536. 124. Ogilvie v Ryan [1976] 2 NSWLR 504 at 520. 125. See, eg Ogilvie v Ryan [1976] 2 NSWLR 504; Thwaites v Ryan [1984] VR 65; Ratto v Trifid Pty Ltd [1987] WAR 237 at 258; McMahon v Ambrose [1987] VR 817 at 847; Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Widin (1990) 102 ALR 289 at 305. 126. See Spry, Equitable Remedies, 7th ed, 2007, p 274. 127. (1918) 25 CLR 69. 128. (1976) 133 CLR 679. See also Watson v Delaney (1991) 22 NSWLR 358. 129. (1976) 133 CLR 679 at 683. 130. Kalnenas v Kovacevich [1961] WAR 188 at 193; Darter Pty Ltd v Malloy [1993] 2 Qd R 615 at 623. 131. (1931) 45 CLR 282 at 300. 132. Cooney v Burns (1922) 30 CLR 216. See also Grummitt v Natalisio [1968] VR 156 (expenditure on surveying and related matters not part performance of contract for sale of land). 133. (1976) 133 CLR 679 (see [9-22]). 134. (1976) 133 CLR 679 at 683. See also Riley v Osbourne [1986] VR 193. 135. Sub nom Millett v Regent [1975] 1 NSWLR 62 at 66. 136. [1975] 1 NSWLR 62 at 71. 137. See ACT: Civil Law (Property) Act 2006, s 204(2); NSW: Conveyancing Act 1919, s54A(2); NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 5(c); Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 6(d); SA: Law of Property Act 1936, s 26(2); Tas: Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1884, s 36(2); Vic: Property Law Act 1958, s 55(d); WA: Property Law Act 1969, s 36(d). 138. See, eg J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey (1931) 45 CLR 282; Steadman v Steadman [1976] AC 536 at 570. 139. See Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, para 30-215. 140. See, eg McMahon v Ambrose [1987] VR 817 at 828. However, damages based on Lord Cairns’ Act (Chancery Amendment Act 1858 (UK) (21 & 22 Vic c 27) see generally [36-25]–[36-29]) may be available; see Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher (1988) 164 CLR 387 (see [7-12]); but cf Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 439; 95 ALR 321. For discussion of
whether a claim for damages may be based on breach of the statutory prohibition (see [19-01], [1902]) on misleading and deceptive conduct see Futuretronics International Pty Ltd v Gadzhis (1990) [1992] 2 VR 217. 141. For the impact of contractual requirements that a variation take a particular form see Musumeci v Winadell Pty Ltd (1994) 34 NSWLR 723. 142. Tallerman & Co Pty Ltd v Nathan’s Merchandise (Victoria) Pty Ltd (1957) 98 CLR 93 at 113; Agricultural and Rural Finance Pty Ltd v Gardiner (2008) 238 CLR 570 at 593; 251 ALR 322 at 340; [2008] HCA 57 at [74]. 143. [1923] AC 48. 144. See Paal Wilson & Co A/S v Partenreederei Hannah Blumenthal [1983] 1 AC 854 at 915 (referring to rescission as ‘abandonment’). 145. See [1-11], [31-12]. 146. [1918] AC 1. 147. [1918] AC 1 at 19. 148. (1957) 98 CLR 93 at 113. 149. [1969] 1 AC 340 at 348, 349. 150. See Tallerman & Co Pty Ltd v Nathan’s Merchandise (Victoria) Pty Ltd (1957) 98 CLR 93 at 123. 151. [1920] 3 KB 475. 152. For the meaning of this expression see [29-08], [30-49]. 153. For the meaning of termination see [32-01]. 154. See further [31-05]. 155. See generally [7-01]–[7-23], [31-08]–[31-10]. 156. See Phillips v Ellinson Bros Pty Ltd (1941) 65 CLR 221 at 244. 157. See, eg Panoutsos v Raymond Hadley Corp of New York [1917] 2 KB 473. Cf Peter Turnbull & Co Pty Ltd v Mundus Trading Co (Australasia) Pty Ltd (1954) 90 CLR 235 (see [30-47]). 158. See, eg Phillips v Ellinson Bros Pty Ltd (1941) 65 CLR 221 at 233, 244; Agricultural and Rural Finance Pty Ltd v Gardiner (2008) 238 CLR 570 at 593–4; 251 ALR 322 at 340; [2008] HCA 57 at [75]. 159. See Electronic Industries Ltd v David Jones Ltd (1954) 91 CLR 288; Gray v Lang (1955) 56 SR (NSW) 7 at 11, 12; United Motels Ltd v Cooper [1964] NSWR 1252 at 1254.
[page 208]
[page 209]
PART III
Terms of the Contract
[page 211]
Chapter 10
Express Terms [10-01] Term may be express or implied. Subject to certain statutory restrictions1 a contract may be wholly oral, or partly oral and partly written. When used in its most general sense the word ‘term’ describes any clause or provision in a contract, whether written or oral. Apart from the terms expressly stated in the contract, implied terms may govern the parties’ relationship. Therefore, in order to identify the terms of a contract it is not always sufficient merely to look at the contract itself, assuming that it is in writing, or to ask what the parties actually said, if the contract is merely oral. Included in the category of express terms are terms incorporated into the contract, for example, by means of a notice displayed at the time the contract is entered into. However, some such terms are actually implied terms.2 In some cases statements made before the contract was entered into may be intended to take effect as terms. However, not all such statements operate as terms.3
Pre-contractual Statements4 Classification [10-02] Purpose of classification. The purpose of classifying statements made prior to entry into the contract is straightforward: a statement which is not a term has no contractual force. The basic classification is between terms and representations. In this context the word ‘term’ has a narrower meaning than stated above, and describes a contractual statement which amounts to an undertaking or guarantee (‘warranty’), by the maker of the statement, of its truth or that the maker had reasonable grounds for making it. In most cases the
promisor is strictly liable on the undertaking to guarantee the truth of the statement, liability in damages does not depend on whether reasonable care was exercised.5 Statements which take effect as collateral contracts are dealt with later.6 [page 212] [10-03] Puffs. At the lowest end of the scale are laudatory statements not intended to be taken seriously. ‘Sales’ talk or ‘puffery’ on behalf of a seller of goods, for example, that a motor vehicle is the ‘best on the market’, does not have contractual force.7 [10-04] Representations. Between puffs and terms is the category of representations. Those are factual statements which induce the representee to enter into the contract but which are not guaranteed by their maker. Frequently such a statement is described as a ‘mere’ representation, reflecting the absence of contractual intent.8 Because a representation has no contractual force, its falsity does not give rise to a claim for damages for breach of contract. If the representor has been guilty of fraud the representee is able to pursue a remedy in tort, and in certain circumstances negligence on the part of a representor may also provide the representee with a claim for common law damages. However, if the representation is innocently made there is no liability in damages at common law and the representee’s only remedy is rescission.9 Under statute reliance on an innocent misrepresentation, or other misleading or deceptive conduct, may give rise to a claim for damages.10 [10-05] Terms. Assuming that a pre-contractual statement is a term of the contract, it takes effect as an express term. Most of the cases concern statements of fact, and when such a statement is a term it is usually referred to as a ‘warranty’. However, this is merely a conventional expression and when classified under the tripartite classification11 may be more accurately described as a ‘condition’ or an ‘intermediate’ term.12 The fact that the statement is a term means that its breach gives rise to a claim for damages. It is therefore necessary to consider whether it is a condition, warranty or an intermediate term only if the promisee claims to be entitled to terminate the performance of the contract.13 What distinguishes a term from a mere representation is the intention of the
maker of the statement to guarantee its truth.14
Relevant Factors [10-06] Intention of parties. Although the basis upon which precontractual statements are classified is the intention of the parties, the court must be objective and ask what conclusion a reasonable person in the [page 213] position of the person to whom the statement was made would have reached.15 If such a person would have concluded that the maker of the statement intended to guarantee its truth, it is a term whether or not there was an actual intention to accept contractual responsibility.16 Where the necessary intention is not established, the statement takes effect as a representation. If it was false the representee is entitled to rescind the contract for misrepresentation if it induced entry into the contract. The representee may also be entitled to damages in tort or under statute, but cannot claim damages for breach of contract. The criterion of intention is easy to state but difficult to apply. In order to decide the issue the courts have regard to various factors and these are considered in the paragraphs which follow. [10-07] Time of statement. The proximity between the statement made and entry into the contract may be relevant to the intention of the parties. If the period is brief it can be presumed that the statement induced entry into the contract. Although that is not sufficient to establish the statement is a term of the contract, when combined with other factors that may be the appropriate conclusion. For example, in Harling v Eddy17 the defendant put a heifer up for auction and, when there was no bid, stated that there was nothing wrong with the animal and that he would absolutely guarantee her in every respect. He also said that he would take the heifer back if she was no good. The plaintiff thereupon bid for the heifer which was sold to him. Within four months the animal died from tuberculosis which she must have been suffering from when sold to the plaintiff. The court held that the defendant’s statement was a term of the contract and that he was liable in damages. The close proximity between the statement and entry into the contract was one factor which justified this conclusion.
Because this factor is not conclusive, the fact that there is delay does not necessarily indicate that a statement was not to have contractual force. [10-08] Content of the statement. The more important the content of a statement the more likely it is that the parties intended it to be a term of the contract. Importance must, of course, depend on the circumstances of the case. For example, in Couchman v Hill18 Couchman purchased a heifer from Hill at a price of £29. The contract was entered into at an auction and before making his bid Couchman asked whether the heifer had been served. Both the seller and the auctioneer replied that the heifer was unserved. This was clearly important because the heifer was young, but the statement turned out to be false and Couchman suffered loss when the heifer died from the early pregnancy. His action for damages for breach of contract was successful because the statement was found to be an offer [page 214] which became a term of the contract when Couchman bid and the animal was knocked down to him.19 [10-09] Existence of written memorandum. If the parties execute a memorandum of the terms of the contract which does not include a precontractual statement later relied on as a term, the representee will find it difficult to establish that the statement was a term. As a matter of common sense, the failure to include the statement is some indication that it was not intended to be a term.20 On the other hand, the failure of the parties to execute a written memorandum is no evidence at all of whether the statement relied on is a term of the contract. If a statement is made, and then later recorded in writing, that is ‘good evidence’ that the statement was intended to be a term in the sense that its truth was guaranteed.21 [10-10] Knowledge and expertise of the parties. Perhaps the most important factor is the relative positions of the parties, and their respective knowledge of the facts. In Ellul v Oakes22 the plaintiffs claimed damages for breach of contract, based on a statement that a property which they purchased from the defendant was sewered. This statement had been made in certain advertising material and the court found that the defendant had guaranteed the truth of the
statement. It was obviously within the knowledge of the defendant whether his property was sewered and the plaintiffs, who were ignorant of the fact that the property was served by a septic tank, were justified in regarding the statement as more than a mere representation. On the other hand, in Oscar Chess Ltd v Williams,23 Williams sold his mother’s car to Oscar Chess in the belief that it was a 1948 model Morris, a fact which he conveyed to Oscar Chess and seemed to be confirmed by the registration book which he produced during negotiations. In fact the car was a 1939 model and Oscar Chess claimed damages for breach of contract. There was no doubt that the statement had some importance, the difference in value between the respective models being about £115. However, the court held that the statement was not a term because there was nothing to indicate that Williams was guaranteeing the year of manufacture. All that he had done was to repeat information conveyed by the registration book: he had no expertise in the matter. In fact, the party who might be expected to have expertise was Oscar Chess who were car dealers. Oscar Chess was distinguished in Dick Bentley Productions Ltd v Harold Smith (Motors) Ltd.24 Harold Smith, the sellers of a motor car, said that the vehicle had been fitted with a replacement engine and gearbox and had [page 215] travelled only 20,000 miles since these were fitted. Dick Bentley purchased the vehicle in reliance on the statement but later discovered that it was false. In an action for breach of contract the trial judge found that the vehicle had in fact travelled nearly 100,000 miles. In holding that the statement was a term of the contract the English Court of Appeal emphasised the fact that Harold Smith were motor dealers, and in a better position to ascertain the history of the vehicle than a private seller. Oscar Chess was distinguishable because the seller there honestly believed on reasonable grounds that the statement made was true. Moreover, he was in no better position to ascertain the facts than the purchaser. In the Dick Bentley case the sellers were in a superior position. A statement by Lord Denning MR in the Dick Bentley case gives rise to some difficulty. He said25 that if a statement ‘is made in the course of dealings for a contract for the very purpose of inducing the other party to act upon it, and actually induces him to act upon it, by entering into the contract, that is prima
facie ground for inferring that it was intended’ as a term of the contract. This implies that inducement and reliance give rise to a presumption that a statement is a term, and would justify a court in holding that statement effective as a term even though there is no further proof of an intention to guarantee the truth of the statement. However, that would be contrary to J J Savage & Sons Pty Ltd v Blakney,26 where the High Court rejected an argument similar to that of Lord Denning. Although the case was decided in the collateral contract context, the better view is that the position is no different where the alleged term is part of a single contract.27 In the Dick Bentley case Lord Denning went on to say28 that the maker of the statement can rebut the presumption by showing ‘that he was in fact innocent of fault in making it, and that it would not be reasonable in the circumstances for him to be bound by it’. However, the traditional view is that whether the maker of the statement was in some way at fault does not come into the matter.29 The focus of the inquiry is what a reasonable person in the other person’s position would conclude, and this leaves little room for analysis of ‘fault’ by the maker of the statement. The expertise of a party may be important in another respect, namely, to distinguish a mere statement of opinion from a statement of fact guaranteed by its maker. For example, where the owner of a gallery stated that a painting was a ‘Constable’, the court said that the statement was in all probability a term of the contract.30 Without the element of expertise the statement would have been regarded as a statement of opinion. [page 216]
Collateral Contracts31 [10-11] Form and nature. There are two forms of collateral contracts. The first arises where A enters into a contract (the main contract) with B because of a promise by B in relation to the subject matter of the main contract, or otherwise by way of inducement to enter into that contract. The promise by B has effect as a promise in a contract between A and B which is collateral to the main contract between the same parties. The second form operates where A enters into a contract with C after a statement by B which takes effect as a contract between A and B which is collateral to the main contract between A and C. In each case, the
consideration for the promise in the collateral contract is entry into the main contract. The nature of collateral contracts appears from a statement made by Lord Moulton in Heilbut Symons & Co v Buckleton:32 It is evident, both on principle and on authority, that there may be a contract the consideration for which is the making of some other contract. ‘If you will make such and such a contract I will give you one hundred pounds,’ is in every sense of the word a complete legal contract. It is collateral to the main contract, but each has an independent existence, and they do not differ in respect of their possessing to the full the character and status of a contract.
It can be seen that the consideration provided for the collateral contract is an executed consideration.33 It is not possible to infer a collateral contract the consideration for which is the entry into the main contract if the main contract was agreed prior to the making of the statement subsequently relied upon as a collateral contract.34 The consideration in such a case would be past consideration.35 The three practical virtues of collateral contracts are: (1) where the main contract is illegal, the collateral contract may be the subject of a claim even though the main contract is not enforceable;36 (2) where a contract is required to be evidenced by writing the collateral contract may not need to be so evidenced;37 and (3) assuming a collateral contract of the second type, the privity of contract rule is avoided.38 [10-12] Elements. In J J Savage & Sons Pty Ltd v Blakney39 the High Court held that in order to establish a collateral contract in respect of a statement of fact three elements must be established: [page 217] (1) that the statement was intended to be relied on; (2) reliance by the party alleging the existence of the contract; and (3) an intention, on the part of the maker of the statement, to guarantee its truth. The facts illustrate the importance of the third element. The plaintiff purchased a cabin cruiser from the defendant. During negotiations the defendant
recommended that the vessel be fitted with a particular type of engine, and said that it would have an estimated maximum speed of 15 miles per hour. An itemised specification and quotation was later provided which made no reference to the speed of the vessel. The plaintiff purchased the vessel with the recommended engine installed, but found it to be incapable of travelling at 15 miles per hour. He therefore claimed damages for breach of an alleged speed warranty. The plaintiff said that he would not have purchased the vessel had the statement not been made, and the Full Court of the Supreme Court of Victoria held that it could be relied on as a collateral contract. On appeal, the High Court said that the plaintiff had established a misrepresentation but not a collateral contract. What the lower court had neglected, and the plaintiff was unable to prove, was the element of guarantee, that is, an intention on the part of the defendant to guarantee (‘warrant’) the truth of the statement. Savage v Blakney also illustrates the difficulty of establishing a collateral contract based on a statement which is, in essence, an expression of opinion.40 This difficulty did not arise in Shepperd v Ryde Corp,41 where the plaintiff entered into a contract for the sale of land after the Ryde Corp had said that it would maintain an area of land (which it owned) located near the land purchased as a park. The High Court was satisfied that the plaintiff would not have entered into the contract but for the statement made, and also that Ryde Corp was in fact promising to maintain the land in question as a park. The consideration for this promise was the plaintiff ’s entry into the contract of sale and a collateral contract was therefore established. The plaintiff had at least made out a prima facie case for relief. He was therefore able to obtain an injunction42 restraining the Ryde Corp from using or permitting the park to be used for any other purpose. [10-13] Requirement of consistency. According to the decision of the High Court in Hoyt’s Pty Ltd v Spencer43 a statement will not take effect as a collateral contract if it is inconsistent with the main contract. A lease contained a term providing for termination by the lessor on his giving at least four weeks’ notice in writing of his intention to terminate. The lessees alleged the existence of a promise by the lessor not to exercise his contractual right unless requested or required by his head lessors to do so. When the lessor exercised his contractual right to terminate despite the absence of any such request or requirement, the lessees sought to use the promise as the basis for a claim for damages. The High Court held that the action could not be maintained because the promise was not consistent
[page 218] with the terms of the main contract. Isaacs J said44 that a ‘principle’ which ‘must govern the bargain of a contractual promise made in consideration of entering into the main contract is that the parties shall have and be subject to all (not some only) of the respective benefits and burdens of the main contract’. It was because the promise was at variance with the main contract (the lease) that the lessees’ action failed. To hold otherwise would have been, in Isaacs J’s words,45 to make the collateral contract the ‘dominant’ contract. Although Hoyt’s v Spencer has been the subject of criticism,46 the High Court has shown no inclination to overrule it.47 But there are decisions which indicate that the requirement of consistency is not applied in England,48 and it is arguable that the doctrine of promissory estoppel will now allow a plaintiff such as the lessees to recover damages.49 Moreover, if the lessees had refused to vacate the premises, the promise by the lessor would have been a defence to an action for possession. The main objection which could have been raised, absence of an existing contractual relation at the time of the statement, would not now be a bar to promissory estoppel.50 [10-14] Contract with third party. The elements of a collateral contract with a third party do not differ greatly from those applicable where the contract is between the parties to the main contract. As in that context, of crucial importance is the intention of the maker of a statement of fact to guarantee its truth, or the presence of a promissory undertaking. For example, in Andrews v Hopkinson51 the plaintiff acquired a second-hand motor car from a finance company on hire-purchase terms. Prior to the contract being entered into the defendant, a motor dealer, had said: ‘It’s a good little bus. I would stake my life on it. You will have no trouble with it’. Unfortunately, the vehicle had a defect which rendered it unroadworthy and the plaintiff was injured when a collision occurred owing to the defect. McNair J held52 that the statement made by the defendant ‘amounted at least to a warranty that the car was in good condition and reasonably safe and fit for use on a public highway’. The consideration for this undertaking was the plaintiff ’s entry into the hire-purchase contract with the finance company. The breach of the undertaking was therefore a breach of a contract collateral to the hire-purchase contract. It might, however, be argued that McNair J was wrong to accept the defendant’s statement as a contractual undertaking, rather than a puff or a mere representation.53
[page 219] The requirement of consistency, applicable where the collateral contract is between the same parties, does not apply where the contract is with a third person. In other words, because they are between different persons, it is not necessary to consider whether the collateral contract is consistent with the main contract. In so far as collateral contracts with third parties have been used as a device for avoiding the privity of contract rule, recent statutory provisions make them less important than was formerly the case.54
Incorporation of Terms55 [10-15] Incorporation by signature. The most obvious way by which terms are incorporated into a contract is by the parties signing (‘executing’) a document. If execution occurs, knowledge of the terms need not be established. In other words, a party may be bound even though not knowing the terms of the contract.56 This was established in L’Estrange v F Graucob Ltd57 where Ms L’Estrange, the proprietor of a cafe business, entered into a contract for the purchase of an automatic vending machine. She signed a document headed ‘sales agreement’ which stated that it contained ‘all the terms and conditions’ under which she had purchased the machine. The document also provided that ‘any express or implied condition, statement, or warranty, statutory or otherwise’ which was not stated in the document was excluded. Ms L’Estrange found the machine to be unsatisfactory and brought an action claiming the return of the money she had paid and damages for breach of a term, which she alleged was implied by the Sale of Goods Act 1893 (UK), requiring the machine to be fit for the purpose for which she purchased it.58 However, the Divisional Court held that no such term could be implied as it was excluded by the document which she had signed.59 The document contained the terms of the contract even though it had not been read. The position in L’Estrange v Graucob might have been different had the defendant misrepresented the effect of the document. Thus, in Curtis v Chemical Cleaning and Dyeing Co60 Ms Curtis took a dress to the defendants’ shop for dry cleaning and was asked to sign a document headed ‘Receipt’. On inquiring into the reason for this, the shop assistant said that the defendants would not accept
liability for certain specified risks, namely, damage to the beads and sequins with which the dress was [page 220] trimmed. In fact, the receipt contained a much wider exclusion which was relied on in the present action for damages based on negligence. The court held that the document could not be treated as incorporating the wide exclusion clause, because of the misrepresentation which had been made. Somervell LJ (with whom Singleton LJ agreed) said61 that ‘owing’ to the misrepresentation the exclusion clause ‘never became part of the contract’. However, Denning LJ said that the conduct of the defendants merely disentitled them from relying on the exclusion except in relation to beads and sequins. He also said62 that a failure to draw attention to the existence or extent of the exclusion clauses might in some cases preclude reliance. However, because of the absence of any general duty of disclosure in contract63 this could only be true in the case of an unusually wide exclusion of liability. A difficult area concerns documents which, although signed, are not obviously contractual in character. For example, if, in Curtis, the shop assistant had said nothing, the plaintiff could have argued that a document headed ‘Receipt’ did not express contractual terms.64 In Le Mans Grand Prix Circuits Pty Ltd v Iliadis65 the Victorian Court of Appeal would seem to have taken a broader view. In that case a printed document which was signed by the respondent included clauses set out in the format of contractual terms. These clauses were introduced by the words ‘In consideration of ’. Nevertheless, the Court of Appeal (Batt JA dissenting) held that the respondent was entitled to regard the document as a registration form which he was asked to sign because he was about to drive one of the appellant’s cars on a go-kart track. An employer had booked the track for use by its employees, and the respondent was not a party to that contract. Reference was made by Tadgell JA (with whom Winneke P agreed)66 to the fact that there was ‘no obvious commercial relationship’ between the appellant and the respondent, and the absence of any payment by the respondent to the appellant. However, the respondent was at least an invitee and, given its form, the document might reasonably have been regarded as contractual in character. It is therefore difficult to reconcile the approach of the court with the rationale for the rule in L’Estrange v Graucob which does not depend on proof that the document has been read, or that the party who relies on a signed document as a
contract brought the character of the document to the other party’s attention. The authority of L’Estrange v Graucob, and the exceptions to the rule referred to in that case, were acknowledged by the High Court in Toll (FGCT) Pty Ltd v Alphapharm Pty Ltd.67 A carrier of goods was held to be entitled to rely on a set of standard terms even though they had not been [page 221] read by the customer. The terms were on the back of an ‘Application for Credit’ which was signed by the customer. The terms therefore protected the carrier when the goods — valuable flu inoculations — were destroyed by being stored at too low a temperature. The court explained the Le Mans case on the basis of a concession made in that case,68 namely, that ‘documents containing an onerous exemptive provision must be brought to the notice of the party against whom they are to be enforced’. Another problem arises where the document is signed after the terms of the contract have been orally agreed. Usually it is appropriate to regard the document as replacing the oral terms, but what if the document is signed after the contract has been performed? The matter arose in D J Hill & Co Pty Ltd v Walter H Wright Pty Ltd.69 The defendants agreed to carry machinery for the plaintiffs, and after the machinery was delivered two documents were signed which made reference to the ‘terms and conditions’ on the back of the documents. It transpired that the machinery had been damaged in transit and the defendants sought to defend the plaintiffs’ action for damages by relying on an exclusion clause on the back of the documents. The Full Court of the Supreme Court of Victoria held that the documents signed were not contractual in character because signature occurred after the contract had been performed. Accordingly, the exclusion clause was no defence to the action. The decision was followed, with reluctance, by Hogarth J in Eggleston v Marley Engineers Pty Ltd.70 He said that documents of the type considered in Hill v Wright should be classified as contractual. The conclusion whether a document should be regarded as contractual will to some extent depend on the knowledge, or assumed knowledge, of how people do business. Clearly, this may vary over time. [10-16] Incorporation by notice. Where no document is signed by the parties,
the usual way by which terms are incorporated is by one of the parties giving the other notice of the terms of the contract. It is difficult to state the legal requirements here beyond saying that the notice must be ‘reasonable’. That is, the party relying on the terms must show that, in the circumstances, reasonable steps were taken to bring the terms to the attention of the other party.71 Most of the cases concern exclusionary terms which a party seeks to rely on in order to exclude, restrict, or qualify liability under the contract. For example, in Chapelton v Barry UDC72 the plaintiff claimed damages for negligence when he was injured by falling through one of the defendant’s deck chairs. The chairs had been in a pile next to a notice stating the rate of hire and ‘respectfully’ requesting the public to obtain tickets from chair attendants. The plaintiff had taken his ticket without looking at it, and therefore did not see a statement on the ticket excluding liability for ‘any [page 222] accident or damage arising from hire of chair’. The court held that, in the absence of any warning, the ticket could not be relied upon as sufficient notice of the exclusion clause which it purported to incorporate.73 Unless a course of dealing is proved between the parties,74 the notice must be given prior to or contemporaneously with entry into the contract. For example, in Olley v Marlborough Court Ltd75 the plaintiff leftj ewellery in her room when staying at the defendant’s hotel. By reason of the defendant’s negligence the jewellery was stolen and it sought to rely on a notice placed in the plaintiff ’s bedroom which excluded liability for valuables which were not handed to the defendant’s manageress for safe custody. The English Court of Appeal held that the contract was formed when the plaintiff paid for her room in advance at the reception desk. The notice in the bedroom did not state a term of the contract because it was not brought to the plaintiff ’s attention before the contract was formed.76 [10-17] The ticket cases. The principle of the ‘ticket cases’ is that where one party makes an offer to contract on terms stated on or referred to in a document (usually no more than a ticket) given to the other party, that party’s decision to keep the document indicates assent to a contract on the terms stated or referred to.77 For example, in Parker v South Eastern Railway Co78 the plaintiffs claimed compensation for the loss of luggage. The luggage had been deposited with the
defendants at their cloakroom. A ticket which was received by each plaintiff when the articles were deposited restricted the defendants’ liability. The court said that assent to the terms of the ticket did not depend on actual knowledge of its contents.79 Evidence of assent to the terms was found in the plaintiffs’ failure to hand the ticket back to the clerk. Parker’s case80 suggests that in considering the application of the ticket cases there are, potentially, three questions to be asked:81 (1) Did the person who received the ticket know that there was writing on the ticket? (2) Did that person know that the ticket referred to terms? (3) Did the party relying on the terms do what was reasonable to bring notice of the existence of the terms sought to be incorporated to the other party’s attention? Despite its constant repetition in the cases, the first question is hardly ever crucial. If it is established that the person who received the ticket did [page 223] not know that there was writing on it, the writing cannot be relied on as incorporating contractual terms. But the point seems to be that in cases where actual knowledge is lacking, knowledge of writing is a step towards proving constructive knowledge of the terms. The ticket cases will not apply if the person who received the ticket did not know that the ticket referred to terms and insufficient notice was given by the other party.82 However, even if the person did not know or believe that the writing contained (or referred to) contractual terms, the terms will be incorporated (and be contractually binding) if the ticket was delivered in circumstances indicating that sufficient notice was given that the writing contained contractual terms. Provided sufficient notice of the nature of the document is given, it does not matter that the recipient did not in fact read the terms or was incapable of doing so.83 For the ticket cases to apply, the party relying on the ticket must also lead a reasonable person to believe that the ticket is a contractual document. Thus, in Chapelton v Barry UDC84 the ticket cases did not apply because the ticket was no more than a receipt: there was no basis for saying that the contract was written rather than oral or inferred from conduct. As Slesser LJ pointed out,85 the
defendant had made a general offer to the public and there was ‘no reason’ anybody taking one of the chairs ‘should necessarily obtain a receipt at the moment he took the chair — and, indeed, the notice is inconsistent with that, because it “respectfully requests” the public to obtain receipts for their money’. Similarly, in Causer v Browne,86 where a docket was given when a dress was left for cleaning, the ticket cases did not apply because the defendants had not proved that the document would reasonably be understood as stating the terms of the contract. The ticket cases are based on an analysis which treats the failure to reject the ticket as the acceptance, by conduct, of the offer of a written contract.87 Since in most cases tickets are proffered on a ‘take it or leave it’ basis, this is largely fictional. Nevertheless, the absence of an ability to reject the ticket and negotiate the terms of the contract will prevent this line of cases applying. Thus, in Thornton v Shoe Lane Parking Ltd88 the document relied on as a ticket incorporating contractual terms was issued by an automatic machine inside the entrance to a car park. Lord Denning MR explained89 that the ticket cases did not apply because any person who received the ticket could not negotiate: ‘He may protest to the machine, even swear at it; but it will remain unmoved’. However, on the assumption that the ticket cases applied, the defendant could not rely on the ticket as incorporating terms, because the plaintiff had no knowledge that the ticket contained terms and the defendant had not done all that was reasonable to bring the terms to the plaintiff ’s notice. The term in issue sought to exclude liability [page 224] for any personal injury suffered by the plaintiff while he was on the defendant’s premises. Emphasis was placed by Lord Denning MR on the fact that the ticket contained an exclusionary term which was unusually wide for the type of contract in issue. Megaw LJ emphasised90 that the restriction was not usual in the class of contract before the court, and Sir Gordon Willmer considered91 that more notice was required in the case of such a ‘stringent’ term. As was pointed out in Interfoto Picture Library Ltd v Stiletto Visual Programmes Ltd,92 Thornton illustrates a refinement of the approach in Parker’s case, from an analysis of the terms as a whole to consideration of particular terms.93 In Interfoto some photographs were sent to the defendant, at its request,
for possible inclusion in a client presentation. Enclosed in the sealed envelope containing the photographs was a delivery note which stated that a ‘holding fee’ of £5 was payable for photographs retained for longer than 14 days following delivery. The defendant, who did not know that the term was present, contended that it did not govern the contract. In fact, the plaintiffs received 47 photographs and retained them for two weeks, for which the fee claimed was £3783.50. Dillon LJ described94 this fee as ‘exorbitant’, and the court (applying Thornton) held that, having regard to the onerous nature of the clause, insufficient notice had been given. In the result £3.50 per transparency per week was allowed as a reasonable fee.95 [10-18] Incorporation by course of dealing.96 A course of dealing occurs when the contract at issue between the parties is preceded by a series of transactions over time. Such a course of dealing may have the effect of incorporating terms into a contract. For example, an oral contract may contain implied terms incorporated by the course of dealing. It is now established that in order to rely on a course of dealing one party need not show that the other party had actual knowledge of the terms. Thus, in Henry Kendall & Sons v William Lillico & Sons Ltd97 a long and consistent course of dealing, and the failure to object to the terms, was held to imply assent to the incorporation of the terms contained in ‘sold notes’ as terms of the contract, even though these were received after an oral contract had been agreed between the parties.98 [page 225] In order to decide whether the terms are incorporated by the course of dealing regard must be had to the extent of dealing between the parties and the steps taken. The course of dealing must be consistent and sufficiently long. For example, in J Spurling Ltd v Bradshaw99 a course of dealing was established by reason of the fact that the parties had contracted on ‘many’ occasions prior to the contract which gave rise to the dispute. And in Henry Kendall & Sons v William Lillico & Sons Ltd the course of dealing extended over three or four years and involved three or four transactions each month. By way of contrast, no course of dealing was established in D J Hill & Co Pty Ltd v Walter H Wright Pty Ltd,100 even though the parties had contracted on a number of occasions. A clearer case is Hollier v Rambler Motors (AMC) Ltd,101 where there were only three or four transactions spread over a period of five years. Moreover, if there is inconsistency in the dealings between the parties the court may conclude that
there is no course of dealing.102 To what extent is it necessary that the terms sought to be incorporated be received prior to the formation of the contract? Spurling v Bradshaw proceeds on the basis that the time at which the document is received is not crucial if a course of dealing is established. In other words, although in a single transaction a document might come too late,103 the existence of a course of dealing implies that even a document received after formation may be incorporated. No doubt the time at which the document comes into existence is relevant to the sufficiency of notice, but in Hill v Wright, where no course of dealing was established, the court appears to have considered that a document received after the contract has been performed cannot be contractual in nature and that it is only in respect of contractual documents that the course of dealing basis for incorporation can apply. It is difficult to accept this as an accurate statement of the law, because the contract is oral rather than written.104 If the court meant to say that the receipt of a document after the contract has been performed attracts a requirement of actual knowledge,105 this is inconsistent with the law stated in Henry Kendall & Sons v William Lillico & Sons Ltd. The degree of knowledge possessed by a party denying that terms have been incorporated by a course of dealing is merely a factor to be considered.106 [10-19] Incorporation by reference. In commercial contracts it is quite common for the parties to record the bare essentials of the contract in a document and for the document to refer to, and incorporate, a set of terms, [page 226] such as the standard form of a trade association,107 the standard terms of one of the parties108 or the terms of another contract related to the transaction.109 This method of incorporation is not limited to commercial contracts. For example, the parties to a contract for the sale of land might incorporate the terms stated in a standard contract approved or issued by a body such as a law society or real estate institute.110 It is also employed in the context of insurance contracts.111 1.
See generally Chapter 9.
2.
See [10-18].
3.
See generally [10-02]–[10-19].
4.
See D E Allan, ‘The Scope of the Contract’ (1967) 41 ALJ 274.
5.
Contrast Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Mardon [1976] QB 801 (see [18-33]).
6.
See [10-11]–[10-14].
7.
Reference should be made to cases on what constitutes an offer for examples of puffs. See [3-08]. See also [8-07], [18-07]. Cf Thake v Maurice [1986] QB 644 at 685 (surgeon’s ‘therapeutic reassurance’).
8.
A representation may be reproduced in a memorandum of a contract, and yet retain its character as a representation. See further [10-09], [13-01], [18-57]–[18-59].
9.
See generally Chapter 18.
10.
See further [18-73]–[18-78] (misrepresentation legislation), Chapter 19 (misleading conduct under statute).
11.
See [13-02]–[13-15].
12.
See [13-11].
13.
For the meaning of termination see [32-01], and generally on termination for breach of a term [3011]–[30-27].
14.
See [10-06].
15.
See, eg Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp (1984) 156 CLR 41 at 61; 55 ALR 417. Cf Oscar Chess Ltd v Williams [1957] 1 WLR 370 at 375 (a statement is a term if an ‘intelligent bystander would reasonably infer’ that its truth was being guaranteed). See further [10-10].
16.
See, eg Ellul v Oakes (1972) 3 SASR 377 at 381.
17.
[1951] 2 KB 739. Cf Faram v Kerr (1877) 3 VLR (L) 146. Contrast Inntrepreneur Pub Co (GL) v East Crown Ltd [2000] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 611 at 615.
18.
[1947] KB 554. See also Gardiner v Grigg (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 524.
19.
See further [14-19].
20.
See Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp (1984) 156 CLR 41 at 62. See further [1208] (impact of parol evidence rule).
21.
Oscar Chess Ltd v Williams [1957] 1 WLR 370 at 376 per Denning LJ.
22.
(1972) 3 SASR 377.
23.
[1957] 1 WLR 370.
24.
[1965] 1 WLR 623.
25.
[1965] 1 WLR 623 at 627.
26.
(1970) 119 CLR 435 at 442. See also Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp (1984) 156 CLR 41 at 61, 116.
27.
See Nemeth v Bayswater Road Pty Ltd [1988] 2 Qd R 406 at 416–17; Banque Brussels Lambert SA v Australian National Industries Ltd (1989) 21 NSWLR 502 at 524. But cf Ellul v Oakes (1972) 3 SASR 377 at 387.
28.
[1965] 1 WLR 623 at 627–8.
29.
See, eg Ellul v Oakes (1972) 3 SASR 377 at 388–9.
30.
Leaf v International Galleries [1950] 2 KB 86.
31.
K W Wedderburn, ‘Collateral Contracts’ [1959] CLJ 58.
32.
[1913] AC 30 at 47. See also Hoyt’s Pty Ltd v Spencer (1919) 27 CLR 133 at 139.
33.
See generally [6-13]–[6-14].
34.
Hercules Motors Pty Ltd v Schubert (1953) 53 SR (NSW) 301.
35.
See [6-28].
36.
See [27-26].
37.
Leipner v McLean (1909) 8 CLR 306. A collateral contract to sign the memorandum of a contract required to be evidenced by writing must be similarly evidenced: Futuretronics International Pty Ltd v Gadzhis (1990) [1992] 2 VR 217; Wright v Madden [1992] 1 Qd R 343.
38.
See further [10-14].
39.
(1970) 119 CLR 435.
40.
See also Ross v Allis-Chalmers Australia Pty Ltd (1980) 32 ALR 561.
41.
(1952) 85 CLR 1.
42.
See generally [40-03]–[40-08].
43.
(1919) 27 CLR 133.
44.
(1919) 27 CLR 133 at 146.
45.
(1919) 27 CLR 133 at 148. See also Cutts v Buckley (1933) 49 CLR 189 at 201; Maybury v Atlantic Union Oil Co Ltd (1953) 89 CLR 507.
46.
See, eg Nicholas Seddon, ‘A Plea for the Reform of the Rule in Hoyt’s Pty Ltd v Spencer’ (1978) 52 ALJ 372.
47.
See Gates v City Mutual Life Assurance Society Ltd (1986) 160 CLR 1; 63 ALR 600. And see Esanda Ltd v Burgess [1984] 2 NSWLR 139.
48.
City and Westminster Properties (1934) Ltd v Mudd [1959] Ch 129.
49.
See J C Phillips and J W Carter, ‘The Demise of Hoyt’s Pty Ltd v Spencer’ (1989) 2 JCL 181. Cf State Rail Authority of New South Wales v Heath Outdoor Pty Ltd (1986) 7 NSWLR 170 at 193.
50.
See [7-10].
51.
[1957] 1 QB 229.
52.
[1957] 1 QB 229 at 235.
53.
Wells (Merstham) Ltd v Buckland Sand and Silica Ltd [1965] 2 QB 170 illustrates a stronger fact situation.
54.
See [16-16], [16-17].
55.
Yates, Exclusion Clauses in Contracts, 2nd ed, 1982, pp 45–64; Malcolm Clarke, ‘Notice of Contractual Terms’ [1976] CLJ 51; Elizabeth Macdonald, ‘Incorporation of Standard Terms in Website Contracting — Clicking “I Agree”’ (2011) 27 JCL 198.
56.
But see [21-12]–[21-20].
57.
[1934] 2 KB 394. For critical analysis see J R Spencer, ‘Signature, Consent, and the Rule in L’Estrange v Graucob’ [1973] CLJ 104.
58.
See [11-20].
59.
But see now [14-23].
60.
[1951] 1 KB 805.
61.
[1951] 1 KB 805 at 808.
62.
[1951] 1 KB 805 at 809.
63.
See generally [18-14].
64.
See [1951] 1 KB 805 at 809. See also [10-17].
65.
[1998] 4 VR 661.
66.
See [1998] 4 VR 661 at 667. See also at 663, 668 per Tadgell JA (‘marketing … or registration’ or ‘application’ form).
67.
(2004) 219 CLR 165; 211 ALR 342. See J W Carter and Elisabeth Peden, ‘Incorporation of Terms by Signature: L’Estrange Rules!’ (2005) 21 JCL 96. See also Equuscorp Pty Ltd v Glengallan Investments Pty Ltd (2004) 218 CLR 472 at 482–3; 211 ALR 101.
68.
See [1998] 4 VR 661 at 667.
69.
[1971] VR 749. See further [10-18].
70.
(1979) 21 SASR 51.
71.
Balmain New Ferry Co Ltd v Robertson (1906) 4 CLR 379 at 386 (affirmed sub nom Robinson v Balmain New Ferry Co Ltd [1910] AC 295). Contrast Royal and Sun Alliance Life Assurance Australia Ltd v Feeney (2001) 80 SASR 229 at 234.
72.
[1940] 1 KB 532.
73.
See also Causer v Browne [1952] VLR 1, and further [10-17].
74.
See [10-18].
75.
[1949] 1 KB 532.
76.
See also Oceanic Sun Line Special Shipping Co Inc v Fay (1988) 165 CLR 197; 79 ALR 9.
77.
See McCutcheon v David MacBrayne Ltd [1964] 1 WLR 125 at 131.
78.
(1877) 2 CPD 416.
79.
A misdirection by the judge at the trial meant that a new trial had to be ordered.
80.
(1877) 2 CPD 416 at 423.
81.
This analysis was approved by the House of Lords in Hood v Anchor Line (Henderson Bros) Ltd [1918] AC 837, a case adopted by the High Court in MacRobertson Miller Airline Services v Commissioner of State Taxation (1975) 133 CLR 125; 8 ALR 131.
82.
See Richardson Spence & Co v Rowntree [1894] AC 217; Oceanic Sun Line Special Shipping Co Inc v Fay (1988) 165 CLR 197.
83.
See, eg Hood v Anchor Line (Henderson Bros) Ltd [1918] AC 837.
84.
[1940] 1 KB 532 (see [10-16]).
85.
[1940] 1 KB 532 at 537.
86.
[1952] VLR 1.
87.
But cf Maxitherm Boilers Pty Ltd v Pacific Dunlop Ltd [1998] 4 VR 559 at 568.
88.
[1971] 2 QB 163.
89.
[1971] 2 QB 163 at 169–70.
90.
[1971] 2 QB 163 at 172. See also Oceanic Sun Line Special Shipping Co Inc v Fay (1988) 165 CLR 197 at 229; Maxitherm Boilers Pty Ltd v Pacific Dunlop Ltd [1998] 4 VR 559 at 569.
91.
[1971] 2 QB 163 at 174.
92.
[1989] QB 433. Cf Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth), s 37.
93.
Cf Amiri Flight Authority v BAE Systems Plc [2003] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 767 at 772; [2003] EWCA Civ 1447 at [15]–[16].
94.
[1989] QB 433 at 436. The court left open the possibility that the clause might have been an unenforceable penalty. See generally [37-07]–[37-17].
95.
As on a quantum meruit (see [38-07]).
96.
See Jane Swanton, ‘Incorporation of Contractual Terms by a Course of Dealing’ (1989) 1 JCL 223.
97.
[1969] 2 AC 31.
98.
The contrary view of Lord Devlin in McCutcheon v David MacBrayne Ltd [1964] 1 WLR 125 at 134, that actual knowledge of the terms is required, was disapproved. See [1969] 2 AC 31 at 90, 104–5, 130.
99.
[1956] 1 WLR 461.
100. [1971] VR 749 (see [10-15]). 101. [1972] 2 QB 71. 102. See, eg McCutcheon v David MacBrayne Ltd [1964] 1 WLR 125. 103. See [10-16]. 104. See Chattis Nominees Pty Ltd v Norman Ross Homeworks Pty Ltd (1992) 28 NSWLR 338 at 343. Cf Mendelssohn v Normand Ltd [1970] 1 QB 177 at 182. Contrast Rinaldi & Patroni Pty Ltd v Precision Mouldings Pty Ltd [1986] WAR 131. See also Pondcil Pty Ltd v Tropical Reef Shipyard Pty Ltd (1994) ATPR Digest ¶46-134 (see S Kapnoullas (1996) 10 JCL 173). 105. See [1971] VR 749 at 752, 753–4. But cf Eggleston v Marley Engineers Pty Ltd (1979) 21 SASR 51 at 62–5. 106. Hollier v Rambler Motors (AMC) Ltd [1972] 2 QB 71 at 77–8. 107. See, eg Bremer HandelsgesellschaftmbH v J H Rayner & Co Ltd [1979] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 216. 108. See, eg Smith v South Wales Switchgear Co Ltd [1978] 1 WLR 165. 109. See, eg Miramar Maritime Corp v Holborn Oil Trading Ltd [1984] AC 676 (bill of lading incorporating terms of charterparty). 110. See, eg Giliberto v Kenny (1983) 48 ALR 620 (HC). 111. But see Deaves v CML Fire and General Insurance Co Ltd (1979) 143 CLR 24; 23 ALR 539.
[page 227]
Chapter 11
Implied Terms and Consumer Guarantees [11-01] Reasons for implication. There are three main reasons for implying terms into a contract. The first reason, which gives rise to a category known as ‘terms implied in fact’, is the need to give business efficacy to a contract. Second, terms may be implied from the nature of the contract itself or the obligations it creates. Third, terms may be implied by statute. The second and third reasons, taken together, give rise to a category of ‘terms implied by law’. There are other, and less important, reasons for implication. Thus, reference was made above1 to implication by course of dealing, and we later deal, briefly, with custom or usage as a reason for implying terms.2 The line of demarcation between the various bases for implication cannot always be sharply drawn. They tend to ‘merge imperceptibly’3 into one another.
Implied Terms in General [11-02] Onus of proof. In the case of terms implied in fact, the presumption is that the contract is effective without the term. Accordingly, the onus of proving that a term should be implied into the contract rests on the party so alleging.4 The onus is most difficult to discharge in detailed commercial contracts simply because the contract will look to state all the terms of the bargain.5 If the onus is discharged the term is deemed to have been implied from the time of contractual formation.6 The same approach is taken to terms implied by custom or usage.7 Where the term in question is of the implied in law variety the onus of proof is different. Once the contract (or the obligations it creates) has been
[page 228] shown to be of a nature or kind in which there is a history of implication the term is presumed to be part of the contract. It is therefore up to the party who alleges that the term should not be implied to prove this.8 Where a term is implied by virtue of statute, there may be specific requirements for implication, and exclusion of the term by agreement may be prohibited.9 [11-03] Issue of law. Whether a term should be implied into a contract is an issue of law to be decided by the court on the basis of the other terms of the contract and the evidence admissible on the issue.10 [11-04] Admissible evidence. Where it is alleged that a term should be implied by law it appears that the court is not limited to a consideration of the contract and its surrounding circumstances. Thus, extrinsic evidence may be admissible to support or rebut the implication, even if the parol evidence rule otherwise applies.11 The law is not so clear with respect to terms implied in fact. The main consideration with respect to such terms is the construction of the contract.12 However, even if the contract is in writing, regard may also be had to the circumstances surrounding the contract in order to establish the ‘factual matrix’ against which the parties contracted.13 On the other hand, evidence of the parties’ negotiations is not admissible for the purpose of implying such a term.14 [11-05] Implied legal duties. Where a term is implied into a contract it will usually embody a contractual promise and therefore create a legal duty. For example, where a sale of goods contract attracts the term requiring the goods to be fit for the buyer’s purpose,15 the term imposes a legal duty on the seller. A failure to discharge the duty will amount to a breach of contract. A party to a contract may, however, be subject to an implied legal duty independently of a contractual term. Thus, a duty may be implied by law from the nature of the parties’ relationship. For example, a customer owes a duty to exercise reasonable care in drawing cheques on an account with its banker.16 Alternatively, the duty may be implied by statute. For example, the sale of goods legislation imposes on a seller of goods a legal duty to deliver the quantity of goods stated in the contract.17 Some duties, such as the duty to cooperate or exercise good faith in the performance of a
[page 229] contract,18 are sometimes based on an implied term, but on other occasions the duty has been inferred by the court solely by the construction of the contract and without the need for implying a term.19 Generally, however, the courts have preferred to employ an implied term analysis in the creation of legal duties, rather than to imply the duty simpliciter.20 An implied legal duty need not be contractual in character and need not give rise to a right to claim damages if it is not discharged. An example is the common law duty of an insured to disclose material facts to an insurer.21 And a legal duty, such as that of a bailee to take reasonable care of the bailor’s goods, may arise even though there is no contractual relation, for example, because the bailment is not supported by consideration.22 However, this work is concerned with legal duties present in contracts, and generally these arise by virtue of contractual terms.
Terms Implied in Fact23 [11-06] Requirements for implication. The requirements for implication in respect of terms implied in fact depend in the first instance on a classification of the contract. If the contract is expressed in a document which is complete on its face, the requirements are those stated by Lord Simon, delivering the advice of the majority of the Privy Council, in BP Refinery (Westernport) Pty Ltd v Shire of Hastings:24 Their Lordships do not think it necessary to review exhaustively the authorities on the implication of a term in a contract which the parties have not thought fit to express. In their view, for a term to be implied, the following conditions (which may overlap) must be satisfied: (1) it must be reasonable and equitable; (2) it must be necessary to give business efficacy to the contract so that no term will be implied if the contract is effective without it; (3) it must be so obvious that ‘it goes without saying’; (4) it must be capable of clear expression; (5) it must not contradict any express term of the contract.
[page 230] However, these requirements are particularly ‘strict’25 or ‘stringent’,26 perhaps overly so. In Attorney General of Belize v Belize Telecom Ltd27 the Privy Council regarded the BP requirements as no more than factors to be considered
when construing the contract. However, that is not the way in which the BP requirements have been applied in the Australian cases, and is one reason why different rules have been adopted for informal contracts. In relation to informal contracts which are not complete on their face, the High Court in Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd28 approved the following statement by Deane J in Hawkins v Clayton:29 where it is apparent that the parties have not attempted to spell out the full terms of their contract, a court should imply a term by reference to the imputed intention of the parties if, but only if, it can be seen that the implication of the particular term is necessary for the reasonable or effective operation of a contract of that nature in the circumstances of the case. That general statement of principle is subject to the qualification that a term may be implied in a contract by established mercantile usage or professional practice or by a past course of dealing between the parties.
It would appear that, in applying Deane J’s statement it is both legitimate and necessary to consider the matters referred to in the BP Refinery case. The difference is that these are more in the nature of factors to be considered than essential requirements. Nevertheless, a term cannot be implied into an informal contract if it is unnecessary to do so, and the term must also be consistent with express terms. [11-07] Reasonable and equitable. Although it is not sufficient to justify an implication that it be reasonable to imply a term,30 any term which is sought to be implied must operate reasonably and equitably between the parties. For example, in Peters American Delicacy Co Ltd v Champion31 a contract between manufacturers and a retailer of ice cream provided: ‘Prices are subject to alteration on giving customer seven days’ notice in writing’. It was argued that the clause was governed by an implied term entitling the manufacturers to fix ‘reasonable’ prices. But a majority of the court said that such a term would be both unfair and unreasonable from the manufacturers’ standpoint, since they might be required, by litigation ‘to enter into a full examination of … manufacturing costs and expenses’32 in order to prove that any price was reasonable. It would also have been [page 231] unfair to the retailer to oblige him to pay any price considered reasonable by the manufacturers.33 [11-08] Necessary to give business efficacy. At the heart of factual implication is the idea that a term should only be implied if it is necessary34 to make the
contract effective in a business sense. If the contract is commercially effective without the term, the court will not imply it.35 But a term will be implied if without it the contract would be unworkable.36 The leading authority on business efficacy is The Moorcock,37 where the plaintiff ’s vessel suffered damage when lying at the defendants’ jetty. The defendants had agreed to allow the plaintiff to discharge and load his vessel at their wharf and for that purpose to be moored alongside the jetty. During low tide the vessel, as the parties contemplated, rested on the mud at the bottom of the River Thames. Damage to the vessel was found to have been occasioned by a ridge of hard ground beneath the mud and the plaintiff claimed compensation. The English Court of Appeal said that a term had to be implied into the contract imposing an obligation on the defendants to see that the bottom of the river was reasonably fit, or to exercise reasonable care in finding out its condition, and to advise the plaintiff of its condition. Bowen LJ said:38 In business transactions such as this, what the law desires to effect by the implication is to give such business efficacy to the transaction as must have been intended at all events by both parties who are business men; not to impose on one side all the perils of the transaction, or to emancipate one side from all the chances of failure, but to make each party promise in law as much, at all events, as it must have been in the contemplation of both parties that he should be responsible for in respect of those perils or chances.
Since the parties knew that the vessel would rest on the bottom at low tide, it was obvious that the contract could not be performed unless the ground was safe. Moreover, the plaintiff was entitled to assume that the defendants, who could be assumed to know the state of the river, had accepted responsibility. Accordingly, the plaintiff was able to recover damages for breach of contract.39 It is common for a contract to involve co-operation between the parties and it requires little imagination to imply a term creating the duty to cooperate or at least not to do anything which will frustrate the operation of the contract.40 In fact, the need for business efficacy may give rise to an implication which imposes an obligation on both parties. For example, in [page 232] Booker Industries Pty Ltd v Wilson Parking (Qld) Pty Ltd41 a lease conferred an option of a further term on the lessee, and provided for the payment of ‘such rental as may be mutually agreed … and failing agreement then such rental as may be fixed by an arbitrator’ nominated in accordance with the lease. The High
Court held that a term should be implied requiring both parties to do all that was reasonably necessary to procure the nomination of an arbitrator. Therefore, once the lessee had exercised the option for renewal, and only the rental was left to be determined, the parties were required to follow the procedure for nomination provided for by the lease and an order for specific performance was made.42 [11-09] Obviousness. In Shirlaw v Southern Foundries (1926) Ltd43 Mackinnon LJ said:44 Prima facie that which in any contract is left to be implied and need not be expressed is something so obvious that it goes without saying; so that, if, while the parties were making their bargain, an officious bystander were to suggest some express provision for it in their agreement, they would testily suppress him with a common ‘Oh, of course!’
The operation of the requirement can be seen by contrasting two cases on commission agency contracts. In Luxor (Eastbourne) Ltd v Cooper45 the plaintiff sought to recover the payment alleged to be due under a contract with the defendants which provided for the payment of commission on ‘completion’ of the sale of two leasehold cinemas with a purchaser introduced by the plaintiff. A prospective purchaser, able and willing to buy the properties, was found by the plaintiff, but no draft contract was ever submitted to the defendants who ultimately sold the properties to another person. The plaintiff alleged that a term should be implied to the effect that the defendants would do nothing to prevent completion of a sale and deprive the plaintiff of commission, at least without ‘reasonable cause’. The House of Lords held that no such term could be implied as it would have prevented the defendants dealing with their own property. It was by no means obvious that the defendants were giving up their freedom of disposal, particularly in view of the fact that the agent did not promise to find a purchaser, or even to use due diligence. On the other hand, in Alpha Trading Ltd v Dunnshaw-Patten Ltd46 the defendants agreed to pay the plaintiffs commission out of the proceeds of a contract for the sale of goods if a purchaser was introduced by the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs introduced a company which entered into a contract with the defendants. However, owing to the default of the defendants under the contract of sale, this contract was not completed and no proceeds were received. The English Court of Appeal, distinguishing Luxor v Cooper [page 233]
where no contract of sale had been entered into, implied a term to the effect that the defendants would not do anything which would prevent the plaintiffs receiving commission. Because in Alpha Trading a contract of sale had been agreed with a purchaser introduced by the plaintiffs, it was obvious that the defendants could not have complete freedom in the matter, and could not deprive the plaintiffs of the benefit of their labours.47 Accordingly, the plaintiffs recovered the agreed commission by way of damages for breach of the term implied into the agency contract. Even the requirement of obviousness may lead to debate. For example, in the Southern Foundries case the House of Lords was split three to two on the implication of the term when affirming the decision of the English Court of Appeal where there had also been a difference of opinion.48 [11-10] Clarity of expression. For a term to be implied it must be capable of clear expression and reasonably certain in its operation.49 There is a link with the requirement of obviousness since a term which is unclear is not likely to be obvious to both parties. For example, in Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales50 the High Court refused to imply a term into a construction contract because it was impossible to say, with any degree of certainty, what the term would have said. The parties had contracted under the misapprehension that construction work could proceed on a three shifts per day basis. Although an injunction obtained by local residents made this impossible, it was by no means clear what term the parties would have included to deal with the eventuality. It is probably true to say that if the court can see, for example, from the arguments of counsel, that various terms could be implied, it will be reluctant to reach the conclusion that one particular formulation was a necessary implication. [11-11] Consistency. The requirement of consistency has two aspects: (1) the term sought to be implied must not contradict the express terms of the contract,51 and (2) the term must not deal with a matter already sufficiently dealt with by the contract.52 For example, in Shepherd v Felt and Textiles of Australia Ltd53 a term was implied into an agency contract requiring the agent to render faithful and [page 234]
loyal service to his principal. This was implied, even though there was an express term requiring the agent to use his ‘best endeavours’ to obtain orders for the principal, because there was no inconsistency between the terms.54 Nor could it be said that the express term had dealt exhaustively with the obligations of the agent. In Hart v MacDonald55 a written contract for the erection of a dairy plant and butter factory provided: ‘It is to be understood that there is no agreement or understanding between [the parties] not embodied’ in the document. The High Court held that this did not preclude the implication of a promise by the defendant to commence the business of dairying upon the erection of plant, and to carry on that business so that he would be able to pay for the plant. This term was necessary because the contract provided for payment out of the proceeds of butter manufactured within the butter factory. The term stating that there was no agreement other than that embodied in the contract did not contradict this implication. Griffith CJ said56 that the implication was ‘necessary’, and arose ‘upon a proper construction of the express words’; O’Connor J said57 that the implication was ‘embodied in the contract just as effectively as if it were written therein’; and Isaacs J explained58 that the express term only excluded what was ‘extraneous’ to the written contract, and did not exclude an implication arising on a ‘fair construction of the agreement itself ’.
Terms Implied in Law [11-12] Requirements for implication. Where a term is implied as a matter of law, rather than because of the factual circumstances of the case, it is usually implied because of the nature of the contract itself: because the same term has been implied in contracts of this nature in the past. Usually the contract is a very informal type, often with no written terms at all. However, because the terms are in the nature of default rules,59 applicable because the parties have not agreed otherwise, existence of writing does not of itself preclude an implication by the court. The list of contracts which attract terms implied in law is not closed,60 and a term may therefore be implied in law in a new situation. However, it must be necessary to make the new implication.61 [page 235]
[11-13] Distinguishing legal from factual implication.62 Although the implication of any term is a question of law for the court,63 there are two quite significant distinctions between factual and legal implication. First, there is a difference in the onus of proof.64 Where a term is implied in fact the onus is on the party alleging the implication. The onus is on the other party when the term is implied in law, assuming that, in the past, the term has been implied into the type of contract before the court. Second, there are important differences in the factors relevant to implication. In particular, ‘reasonableness’ is more important to legal implication and a term may be implied by law, on the ground that it is reasonable to do so, even though the ‘business efficacy’ and ‘obviousness’ criteria of terms implied in fact are not satisfied.65 It is also the case that a term may be implied in law even though it lacks the necessary precision of a term implied in fact.66 It is sometimes said that there is a third distinction, namely that the presumed intention of the parties is the rationale for terms implied in law, whereas actual intention is the rationale of terms implied in fact.67 Even if this distinction is helpful, which may be doubted, it is impossible to find any consistent approach in the cases.68 Nevertheless, once a term has been implied, it is often difficult to tell whether the court’s decision is based on factual or legal implication. Thus, some terms which have been based on the requirement of business efficacy look, in the final analysis, to be terms implied in law, because they involve the ‘imposition of legal duties in cases where the law thinks that policy requires it’.69 Moreover, where an informal contract is in issue it may now be very difficult to draw the line between factual and legal implication. [11-14] Illustrations. To decide whether a term is implied in law it is necessary to classify the contract. By way of illustration, reference can be made to terms usually implied in employment contracts, bailment contracts and contracts for work and materials.70 Where an employment contract exists the court will, in the absence of express exclusion (or the imposition of a more onerous duty), imply a term requiring the employee to exercise ‘proper or reasonable care’ in the [page 236]
discharge of duties under the contract.71 Where the contract is for the provision of services by a professional person, such as a solicitor, insurance broker or engineer, the term will require the exercise of the degree of care expected of a person in the profession, trade or industry possessing the particular special skill.72 A bailment contract imposes on the bailee an obligation not to convert the bailor’s goods and to exercise reasonable care.73 Where a contract involves the execution of work and the supply of materials, such as in the building of a house, the law implies terms requiring the contractor to use reasonable care in doing the work and to supply materials which are of ‘good quality’ and ‘reasonably fit for the purpose’ for which they are supplied.74 [11-15] Unjust or unreasonable terms not implied. A term will not be implied in law if, in the circumstances of the case, it is unjust or unreasonable to imply it. For example, in Gloucestershire County Council v Richardson,75 a builder was employed by the council to build extensions to a technical college and in doing so used concrete supplied by a supplier nominated, as required in the contract, by the County architect. The cement was defective and delays occurred in the building of the extensions. As the council would not provide compensation for the builder in respect of the defects he abandoned the work. One issue before the House of Lords was whether the implied term of quality, normally present in a work and materials contract,76 was implied in the contract between the builder and the council. It was held that the term was not implied because it would have been unjust to imply it. The supplier had been nominated by the council, the builder had no right to veto the nomination and was bound by terms which, as between the builder and the supplier, severely restricted the builder’s rights in respect of defective supply. The restriction would effectively have prevented the builder obtaining compensation from the supplier and it would therefore have been unjust to hold the builder liable to the council on an implied term. [11-16] Consistency and concurrent duties. The requirement of consistency between express and implied terms also applies where the term is the subject of legal implication. Thus, in Gemmell Power Farming Co Ltd v Nies77 the defendant alleged the breach of a contract of hire on the basis of [page 237]
an implied term relating to the fitness of a tractor for the hirer’s purpose. It was held that the existence of an express warranty (cl 7) and an exclusion of liability (cl 8) combined to exclude the alleged implied term by virtue of their inconsistency with the term sought to be implied.78 Where there is a duty under the law of tort, for example, to exercise reasonable care, the courts have in recent years been reluctant to imply a contractual term which would have the effect of increasing one party’s obligations under a contract which is not obviously incomplete.79 However, these cases do not deny the ability to imply a term to define the standard of care.80 The cases also indicate that a tortious duty of care — which would frequently operate in a similar way to a term implied in law — will not be imposed where the contract is intended to be a complete statement of the parties’ obligations.81 The converse is not, however, correct. Thus, it is now clear that a term may be implied to create a contractual duty which mirrors the tortious duty.82 Since the contract provides the setting for the tortious duty, it would be peculiar for the tortious duty to displace the term which would otherwise be implied as a matter of law. Thus, generally, a professional person will be subject to concurrent duties of care in both contract and tort.83
Terms Implied by Statute [11-17] Extent of legislative intervention. The category of terms implied by statute is a large one, and it is beyond the scope of this work to give any more than an outline of the relevant provisions. The treatment will not extend beyond contracts for the supply of goods and services, and emphasis will be given to supply by way of sale. It should perhaps be pointed out that many of the terms now implied by statute were at one time implied at common law.
Sale of Goods [11-18] Implied terms relating to title. In a contract of sale, unless the circumstances of the contract are such as to show a different intention, s 17 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW)84 provides that there is:
[page 238] (1) an implied condition on the part of the seller that in the case of a sale the seller has a right to sell the goods, and that in the case of an agreement to sell the seller will have a right to sell the goods at the time when the property is to pass; (2) an implied warranty that the buyer will have and enjoy quiet possession of the goods; and (3) an implied warranty that the goods are free from any charge or encumbrance in favour of any third party not declared or known to the buyer before or at the time when the contract is made. Because the first implied term is a condition, proof that the seller had no right to sell will justify termination of the contract by the buyer.85 On the other hand, because the applicable implied terms are warranties where the buyer’s quiet possession of the goods is interfered with, or there is a charge or encumbrance on the goods, the buyer must be satisfied with a claim for damages.86 [11-19] Correspondence with description.87 Under s 18 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW)88 a condition is implied into a contract for the sale of goods by description, requiring the goods to correspond with that description. For the term to be implied the buyer must rely on the description when entering into the contract.89 Two main issues may arise in the application of s 18: whether the sale is by description; and whether the goods delivered (or tendered) correspond with that description. In Wallis v Pratt90 sellers agreed to sell goods described in the contract as ‘common English sainfoin’. The sale was by description because the description was the means by which the subject matter of the contract had been identified.91 Where the goods are selected by a consumer from a retailer’s stock, as in the normal retail sale, the transaction need not be a sale by description. However, if, for example, the consumer asks to buy ‘a hot water bottle’, the sale will be by description because the goods are being chosen on the basis of a particular description.92 Correspondence with description is more complex. The court must first identify the words which actually describe the goods. Words directed solely
[page 239] to quality are not part of the goods’ description,93 whereas the elements used to identify the goods usually are. Thus, in Wallis v Pratt the descriptive words were ‘common English sainfoin’. The sellers were in breach of contract because they delivered goods of another description, namely, ‘giant sainfoin’. There is a tendency to distinguish commercial contracts, for example, for the sale of commodities such as wheat, from other types of contracts.94 In the former, every detail of the description may be essential and the slightest deviation a breach of condition.95 But in other contracts the non-correspondence must relate to a substantial ingredient of the ‘identity’ of the goods sold before there is a breach of the implied condition.96 [11-20] Fitness for purpose. Under s 19(1) of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW),97 a condition requiring the goods to be fit for the buyer’s purpose will be implied if:98 the buyer made a particular purpose known to the seller; the purpose was made known in such a way as to show reliance on the seller’s skill or judgment; and the goods were of a description which it was in the course of the seller’s business to supply (as manufacturer or otherwise). An example is provided by Frost v Aylesbury Dairy Co Ltd99 where milk was supplied by the defendants who were dealers in milk. A breach of the implied condition of fitness for purpose was established by proof that the milk contained typhoid fever germs. The sellers said that they had taken special precautions to ensure that only pure milk would be supplied. The milk was obtained for the purpose of human consumption and in the circumstances it was clear that the buyer had relied on the sellers’ skill or judgment. There was no doubt that it was in the course of the sellers’ business to supply goods described as ‘milk’. The case also illustrates that the liability of sellers is strict in relation to purpose (and quality) since the defect in the goods was latent.100 In order for the condition to be implied the buyer need not rely exclusively on the seller’s skill or judgment.101 [page 240]
[11-21] Merchantable quality. Section 19(2) of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW)102 states that where goods are bought by description from a seller who deals in goods of that description there is an implied condition that the goods purchased are of ‘merchantable quality’. The provision is subject to a proviso that if the buyer has examined the goods there is no implied condition as regards defects which such an examination ‘ought to have revealed’. The requirement that the goods be ‘bought’ by description means that there must have been a sale by description;103 and the requirement is the same as in s 19(1). Thus, the seller’s business must include a willingness to accept orders for goods of that description.104 The proviso indicates that a buyer who has not examined the goods will be in a better position than one who has. However, the proviso will not prevent the condition being implied, and a breach established, in relation to latent defects in the goods, that is, those not discoverable by an examination of the goods. For example, in Grant v Australian Knitting Mills Ltd105 the plaintiff purchased woollen underwear from a retailer and contracted dermatitis because of the presence of a chemical irritant in the garments. The implied condition was established, and a breach proved, even though the defect in the goods could not have been discovered by any examination by either the buyer or the retailer. Moreover, liability was established without any proof by the buyer that the retailer had failed to exercise reasonable care. The Privy Council said:106 [W]hatever else merchantable may mean, it does mean that the article sold, if only meant for one particular use in ordinary course, is fit for that use; merchantable does not mean that the thing is saleable in the market simply because it looks all right; it is not merchantable in that event if it has defects unfitting it for its only proper use but not apparent on ordinary examination …
The statement indicates that ‘merchantable’ means ‘saleable’, but also indicates that the purpose to which the goods are put is relevant in determining whether the goods are merchantable. It can therefore be inferred that in cases where goods can be put to more than one use it may be difficult to decide whether the goods are merchantable. Where a range of purposes is possible it would seem that, at common law, regard must be had to the description of the goods, the price at which they are sold and the range of purposes.107 Generally, goods are merchantable if fit for at least one of the range of purposes to which the goods are usually put. The fact that purpose is relevant to both fitness for purpose and merchantable quality indicates that there is an overlap between ss 19(1)
[page 241] and 19(2). For example, in Grant v Australian Knitting Mills Ltd a breach of both implied conditions was established. It is also fair to say that the decisions have tended to widen the fitness for purpose provision at the expense of the merchantable quality provision.108 In respect of ‘consumer’ sales covered by Pt VIII of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW) there is no implied condition of merchantable quality as regards ‘defects brought to the buyer’s notice before the contract was entered into’.109 There is also, in s 64(3), a definition of ‘merchantable quality’ in the following terms:110 Without limiting the meaning of the expression ‘merchantable quality’, goods of any kind which are the subject of a contract for a consumer sale are not of merchantable quality if they are not as fit for the purpose or purposes for which goods of that kind are commonly bought as is reasonable to expect having regard to their price, to any description applied to them by the seller and to all other circumstances.
An important question of interpretation arises in respect of the statutory definition of merchantable quality.111 At common law goods commonly used for more than one purpose would clearly be unmerchantable only if of no use for any of the range of purposes.112 Suitability for one such purpose may therefore be sufficient. Although, in theory, the effect of the definitions may be to narrow the common law, by emphasising purpose for use rather than saleable quality, s 64(3) of the Sale of Goods Act (NSW) is at least as wide as the common law because it is introduced by words which preserve any wider meaning. One view is that these definitions merely reproduce the common law.113 There is, however, authority to suggest that the law has been changed, and that the effect of the definitions is to require goods, commonly used for a number of purposes, to be suitable for all of those purposes.114 [11-22] Sale by sample. Section 20 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW)115 provides that, in the case of a sale by sample, there are three implied conditions, requiring: (1) that the bulk correspond with the sample in quality; (2) that the buyer have a reasonable opportunity of comparing the bulk with the sample; and [page 242]
(3) that the goods be free from any defect rendering them unmerchantable which would not be apparent on reasonable examination of the sample. A contract is one for sale by sample if there is an express or implied term to that effect.116
Further Illustrations [11-23] Supply of goods other than by sale. Where no legislative provisions deal with the implication of terms in contracts for the supply of goods, the common law must be relied on for the implication of terms. In Derbyshire Building Co Pty Ltd v Becker117 Kitto J said:118 The authorities concerning the nature of an implied term in a contract of bailment … are not uniform. But the weight of judicial opinion is, I think, in favour of applying to all contracts for the supply of chattels, including contracts of bailment, the principles laid down with respect to sales in s 14 of the Sale of Goods Act 1893 (UK).
For example, where goods are hired there is, at common law, an implied term that the goods are fit for the hirer’s purpose provided, of course, that the hirer has communicated the specific purpose in such a way as to indicate reliance on the supplier’s skill or judgment.119 [11-24] Supply of services. Under the common law terms are implied into contracts for the provision of ‘services’. There is, therefore, an implied term that the services will be rendered with due care and skill,120 and also implied terms regulating the quality and fitness of any goods supplied.121 Although conventionally described as ‘warranties’ the terms relating to goods (‘materials’) supplied with services are usually implied as ‘conditions’.122
Terms Implied by Custom or Usage [11-25] Requirements for implication. A term may sometimes be implied into a contract by reason of a custom or usage in the market. The phrase ‘custom or usage’ includes established mercantile usage or professional practice.123 The parties are regarded as having contracted on the basis of any custom or usage applicable and the term is implied in accordance with the custom or usage. For a term to be implied the custom or usage must be proved to be ‘notorious, certain, legal and reasonable’.124 For example, in Sagar v H Ridehalgh & Son Ltd125 the defendants, who employed the plaintiff as a
[page 243] weaver, made deductions from the plaintiff ’s wages in respect of cloth which had not been properly woven. A usage in the Lancashire region, where the plaintiff worked, was established which justified the deduction. The fact that some mill-owners in the region did not make deductions did not prevent the usage being applied because there was evidence that over 85 per cent of the mills in the county made such deductions. Evidence of actual market practices is nevertheless crucial. Thus, in Con-Stan Industries of Australia Pty Ltd v Norwich Winterthur Insurance (Australia) Ltd126 the appellants before the High Court failed to establish a term alleged to be implied into contracts between themselves and their insurers on the basis of commercial custom or usage. The implied term would have precluded the insurer making any claim against the appellants if the broker to whom they paid a premium did not pass it on, or would have required the insurers to look to the broker for payment whether or not the premium had been paid to the broker. There was no proof that insurers in the market invariably, or even regularly, abstained from making claims against insureds in cases where the broker defaulted and in the absence of such proof there was no basis for implication on the ground of custom or usage. However, the court made it clear that universal acceptance of a custom is not essential. A term which is inconsistent with the express terms of the contract will not be implied even if the custom or usage is established. Thus, in Summers v The Commonwealth127 a contract was entered into for the supply of 671 cubic feet of marble for Australia House, London. The contract required the size of each block to be full enough ‘to admit of its being worked and polished in London without blemish on every side if need be, to the size set out in the schedule’ to the contract. The supplier alleged the existence of a trade usage under which it was sufficient for him to supply blocks of marble from which a number of the schedule sized blocks could be cut. The court was not satisfied that the usage was established; but said that, even if this was the case, no term could have been implied because the usage was inconsistent with the express term.128 Similarly, a term cannot be implied if the trade usage establishes a matter dealt with sufficiently by the express terms.129 Establishing a course of conduct in a given market does not indicate that a term giving contractual effect to that course of conduct can be implied. It is necessary for the course of conduct to have a binding effect in the market, that is
to say, the merchants who operate in the market must regard themselves as bound by the usage unless it has been expressly excluded.130 [page 244]
Consumer Guarantees131 General [11-26] Introduction. Terms were formerly implied by Pt V, Div 2 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) and corresponding provisions of the fair trading legislation into contracts for the supply of goods and services to ‘consumers’. That regime has been replaced. For contracts for the supply of goods and services to consumers entered into from 1 January 2011, the consumer guarantees regime of the Australian Consumer Law applies.132 Consumer guarantees imposed by the Australian Consumer Law create specific statutory duties. They are not implied terms. If goods or services do not comply with a consumer guarantee, the rights and remedies available to a consumer against a supplier (or a manufacturer) are based on the idea of breach of statutory duty, rather than breach of a term of the contract. However, the fact that goods or services do not conform to a consumer guarantee is not a contravention of the Australian Consumer Law. In some cases, failure to comply with a consumer guarantee will also be a breach of contract, as where a supplier of services breaches an express undertaking to exercise reasonable care and skill when providing services. The Australian Consumer Law does not explain the impact of the rights and remedies which are available under the general law of contract. Similarly, nothing is said about the impact on rights and remedies available where a condition or warranty implied by the sale of goods legislation is breached.133 [11-27] Definition of ‘consumer’. The definition of ‘consumer’ in s 3 of the Australian Consumer Law is modelled on s 4B of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth). The bases on which a person can be a consumer under a contract for the supply of goods or services are therefore broadly the same under the new law as they were under the old law. Unlike the position under the sale of goods
legislation, supply of goods is not limited to supply by way of sale. The impact of s 3 of the Australian Consumer Law is to create a number of categories of consumer, that is, situations in which a supply of goods or services is to a ‘consumer’. The two main categories134 are: (1) a supply of goods or services at a price which does not exceed $40,000; and (2) a supply of goods or services of a kind ordinarily acquired for personal, domestic or household use or consumption. It follows that where the goods or services are of a kind ordinarily acquired for personal, domestic or household use or consumption, price is irrelevant. Therefore, a contract for the supply of goods at a price of, say [page 245] $1 million, may be a supply to a consumer. A corporation may be a consumer, even though the goods or services are acquired in the course of a business, and for business purposes (other than resupply).135 For example, a contract for the supply of services to a large corporation at a price of $1 million may be a supply to a ‘consumer’. The one significant exception under the definition in s 3 of the Australian Consumer Law is that people who acquire goods, or hold themselves out as acquiring goods, for the purpose of resupply, are not consumers. There is no concept of acquisition for the purpose of resupply in relation to services. In order for a supply to be a supply to a consumer, the supply must relate to goods or services (including a contract that relates to goods and services) as defined. Section 2(1) of the Australian Consumer Law defines ‘goods’ to include: ships, aircraft and other vehicles; animals, including fish; minerals, trees and crops whether on, under or attached to land or not; gas and electricity;136 computer software; second-hand goods; and any component, part of, or accessory to goods.
There are specific and general exceptions or qualifications in relation to some of the consumer guarantee provisions relating to goods.137 When compared with the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), computer software, second-hand goods and any component, part of, or accessory to goods, are new categories. It is doubtful whether every contract by which software is licensed to a person is capable of being characterised as a supply of goods under the Australian Consumer Law definition. However, where it cannot be so characterised, it will be a supply of services. The definition of services is also broadly expressed.138 However, the concept does not include rights or benefits which involve the supply of goods, or the performance of work under a contract of service. There are also specific exceptions.139 Where it is alleged that a supply is a supply of goods or services to a consumer, the onus of proving that the person was not a consumer rests on the supplier.140 The definition of consumer is also important to the use of exclusion clauses, as discussed in Chapter 14. [page 246]
The Guarantees [11-28] Introduction. Under the Australian Consumer Law, consumer guarantees operate in relation to the supply of goods and services to consumers. Generally, except for the consumer guarantees relating to title, they apply only to supplies made in ‘trade or commerce’.141 Similarly, with the same general exception, they do not apply to a supply which occurs by way of ‘sale by auction’.142 Many of the consumer guarantees use the same concepts as under the sale of goods legislation discussed above.143 However, the requirements which must be satisfied for the consumer guarantees to apply are much more easily established than those which apply under the sale of goods legislation. [11-29] Consumer guarantees in relation to goods. Under the Australian Consumer Law, the consumer guarantees in relation to goods supplied to a
consumer relate to: the supplier’s title to goods, including freedom from encumbrances, and so on (ss 51, 52 and 53); the quality of the goods — a guarantee that the goods are of ‘acceptable quality’ (s 54); the reasonable fitness of goods for their intended purpose (s 55); compliance of goods sold by description with their description (s 56); conformity of goods with a sample or demonstration model by reference to which they were supplied (s 57); reasonable action by a manufacturer to ensure that facilities for the repair of the goods, and parts for the goods, are reasonably available (s 58(1)); and compliance with any express warranty given by a supplier or manufacturer in relation to the goods (s 59). Consumers will not have the benefit of all of the consumer guarantees provided for by the Australian Consumer Law in respect of every contract for the supply of goods into which they enter. For example, there may be no supply by reference to a sample or demonstration model (s 57). Most of the consumer guarantees are subject to particular requirements. For example, the consumer guarantee in relation to the description of goods applies only in the case of a supply by description (s 56). Most importantly, except in relation to the title guarantees (Australian Consumer Law, ss 51, 52 and 53), it is essential that the supply occur ‘in trade or commerce’. Accordingly, the other consumer guarantees do not apply to private transactions. If a consumer guarantee is not complied with, for example, because goods are not of ‘acceptable’ quality, the consumer will have rights and remedies against the supplier.144 [page 247] [11-30] Acceptable quality. Perhaps the most important consumer guarantee under the Australian Consumer Law is the consumer guarantee that goods supplied are of ‘acceptable quality’ (s 54). Section 54(2) of the Australian Consumer Law defines ‘acceptable quality’ in terms of whether goods are:
fit for all the purposes for which goods of that kind are commonly supplied; acceptable in appearance and finish; free from defects; safe; and durable. The goods must satisfy all those requirements. Goods are ‘acceptable’ only if a reasonable consumer fully acquainted with the state and condition of the goods (including any hidden defects of the goods) would regard them as acceptable. Regard may be to the matters listed in s 54(3) of the Australian Consumer Law. [11-31] Express warranties. Where an express warranty is given, it will take effect as a consumer guarantee under the Australian Consumer Law.145 The concept of ‘express warranty’ is applicable only to contracts for the supply of goods. Although it may include express terms (whether or not described in a contractual document as ‘warranties’), it is not limited to those terms. The concept is also applicable to manufacturers of goods. The definition of express warranty in s 2(1) requires ‘an undertaking, assertion or representation’: (a) that relates to: (i)
the quality, state, condition, performance or characteristics of the goods; or
(ii) the provision of services that are or may at any time be required for the goods; or (iii) the supply of parts that are or may at any time be required for the goods; or (iv) the future availability of identical goods, or of goods constituting or forming part of a set of which the goods, in relation to which the undertaking, assertion or representation is given or made, form part; and (b) that is given or made in connection with the supply of the goods, or in connection with the promotion by any means of the supply or use of the goods; and (c) the natural tendency of which is to induce persons to acquire the goods. These requirements may be satisfied in relation to statements made in the
promotion or negotiation of a supply of goods to a consumer. The statement may be made orally or in advertising or other material. That material may be made available or provided by the supplier, or by the manufacturer of the goods. [page 248] Because it is sufficient that the statement is a ‘representation’, the provision departs from the common law, under which an intention to guarantee the truth or accuracy of the statement is required.146 In addition, under the general law it is not a sufficient test of ‘warranty’ that a statement would have induced a reasonable person to enter into a contract. However, under the Australian Consumer Law, the element expressed in terms of a ‘tendency’ to induce persons to acquire the goods not only serves to ensure that the ‘undertaking, assertion or representation’ need not be the sole inducement, it also applies an objective standard. The consumer is not required to prove reliance on the ‘undertaking, assertion or representation’. [11-32] Consumer guarantees in relation to services. The Australian Consumer Law states four consumer guarantees where the contract is for the supply of services to a consumer: a guarantee of due care and skill by the supplier (s 60); a guarantee that the services and any product resulting from the services will be reasonably fit for any particular purpose that the consumer made known to the supplier (s 61(1)); a guarantee that services and any product resulting from the services will be of such a nature and quality that they might reasonably be expected to achieve any result that the consumer made known (s 61(2)); and if no fixed time for supply is specified, a guarantee of supply within a reasonable time (s 62). The concept of ‘product’ is not defined. Under the Australian Consumer Law, there is no reference to a separate category of consumer guarantees for goods or materials supplied with services. It would appear that in a supply of both work and materials,147 the contract is for a ‘mixed supply’.148 For example, if a contractor agrees to supply and install a timber floor, the contract is for a mixed supply. The result is that, in so far as the supply of materials is a supply of goods to a consumer, consumer guarantees in
relation to goods may apply. And in relation to the services element of the contract (‘work’), the consumer guarantees in relation to services may apply, provided the contract is for the supply of services to a consumer. That would seem to include any end ‘product’ which those services may have, in the example the completed floor.
Rights and Remedies [11-33] Introduction. The Australian Consumer Law states a unique — and extremely complex and intricate — set of rights and remedies in relation to consumer guarantees. Several important features may be noted. [page 249] First, because the consumer guarantees are not classified as conditions or warranties, whether a consumer is entitled to reject goods, or entitled to terminate a contract for the supply of services, is not predetermined. The Australian Consumer Law draws a distinction between a major failure to comply with a consumer guarantee and a failure which is not a major failure. Second, under the Australian Consumer Law, a consumer’s right to damages is statutory, not contractual. However, unlike the position where the Australian Consumer Law is contravened,149 the assessment of damages is not left to be determined entirely by the courts. The Australian Consumer Law includes statements as to the measure of damages to which a consumer is entitled, as well as a criterion for remoteness of damage. Third, the Australian Consumer Law introduces further ideas, such the right of a consumer to terminate a connected contract. It also attempts to put in place a more sophisticated approach than the common law. For example, there is an express right to require a supplier to remedy defects in goods. [11-34] Impact of a failure to comply. The failure of goods or services to comply with one or more consumer guarantees activates the remedial regime of the Australian Consumer Law. Rights and remedies under the Australian Consumer Law include: damages;
repair of goods; rejection of goods; termination of a contract for the supply of services; termination of a connected contract;150 and damages for what are conceived of as ‘consequential losses’. Of course, not all these rights and remedies are available for every failure by a supplier to comply with a consumer guarantee, or in respect of every consumer guarantee. In relation to goods, s 259(1) provides: (1) A consumer may take action under this section if: (a) a person (the supplier) supplies, in trade or commerce, goods to the consumer; and (b) a guarantee that applies to the supply under Subdivision A of Division 1 of Part 3-2 (other than sections 58 and 59(1)) is not complied with.
In relation to services, s 267(1) states: (1) A consumer may take action under this section if: (a) a person (the supplier) supplies, in trade or commerce, services to the consumer; and [page 250] (b) a guarantee that applies to the supply under Subdivision B of Division 1 of Part 3-2 is not complied with; and (c) unless the guarantee is the guarantee under section 60 — the failure to comply with the guarantee did not occur only because of: (i)
an act, default or omission of, or a representation made by, any person other than the supplier, or an agent or employee of the supplier; or
(ii) a cause independent of human control that occurred after the services were supplied.
The rights and remedies available to consumers — including corporations who are consumers — are very extensive. [11-35] Supply of goods. Rights and remedies in relation to goods are stated in s 259 of the Australian Consumer Law. Strangely, the Australian Consumer Law does not speak in terms of termination of the contract. In relation to goods, the concept is rejection of the goods. The general rule under s 259 is that a consumer is entitled to reject goods only if there is a major failure to comply with a consumer guarantee in relation
to the goods. If the failure to comply with a consumer guarantee in relation to goods is not a major failure, s 259(2) of the Australian Consumer Law applies. Under that provision, the consumer may require the supplier to remedy the failure within a reasonable time. Even though the failure to comply with a consumer guarantee in relation to goods may not be a major failure, if the supplier refuses or fails to remedy the failure, the consumer is entitled to reject the goods. And under s 259(3), if the failure to comply with the guarantee cannot be remedied or is a major failure, the consumer may choose between rejection of the goods and recovering damages, measured on a difference in value basis. The Australian Consumer Law does not provide any certainty as to when a consumer can reject goods without first providing the supplier with an opportunity to remedy defects. Apart from the issue of how it is determined that goods can (or cannot) be repaired, there is also the issue of how a consumer determines that there is a major failure. Section 260 deals with when a failure to comply with a guarantee is a major failure. In order to be able to be able to reject goods, consumers must prove matters such as that: ‘goods depart in one or more significant respects’ from description or sample; ‘goods are substantially unfit’ and they cannot ‘easily’ be made fit; or that ‘goods … cannot, easily and within a reasonable time, be remedied’ to make them fit for a disclosed purpose. The impact of the Australian Consumer Law is to give to consumer guarantees characteristics similar to ‘intermediate terms’ under the general law.151 Unlike the breach of a condition, the breach of an intermediate term does not confer a right to terminate a contract (which would include a rejection of goods the subject of a supply by way of sale) unless the breach is ‘sufficiently serious’. That is a concept of performance being substantially different. [page 251] Further restrictions are placed on a consumer’s right of rejection by s 261 of the Australian Consumer Law. These include a time limit on rejection. The consequences of the rejection of goods are stated in s 263 of the Australian Consumer Law. In broad outline: the consumer must return the goods to the supplier (s 263(2));
at the election of the consumer, the supplier must refund any money paid by the consumer for the goods, or replace the rejected goods with goods of the same type, and of similar value (s 263(4)); and if the property in the rejected goods had passed to the consumer before the rejection was notified, the property in those goods revests in the supplier (s 263(6)). Given those consequences, the contract of supply must be regarded as terminated by a rejection of goods. [11-36] Supply of services. Rights and remedies in relation to services are stated in s 267 of the Australian Consumer Law. There are three basic rules which apply where a supplier fails to comply with a consumer guarantee under a contract for the supply of services. First, the consumer is entitled to damages. Second, if the failure to comply with a consumer guarantee imposed by the Australian Consumer Law is a major failure, the consumer is entitled to terminate the contract. Third, if the failure to comply with a consumer guarantee is not a major failure, the consumer is entitled to require the supplier to remedy the failure. What amounts to a ‘major failure’ to comply with a consumer guarantee imposed on a supplier of services is stated in s 268 of the Australian Consumer Law. The rules stated in s 268 are more complex than the rules stated in s 260 in relation to supplies of goods. The more straightforward situations include: the services would not have been acquired by a reasonable consumer fully acquainted with the nature and extent of the failure; the services are substantially unfit for a purpose for which services of the same kind are commonly supplied and they cannot, easily and within a reasonable time be remedied to make them fit for such a purpose; and the supply of the services creates an unsafe situation. Section 267(3) of the Australian Consumer Law also confers a right of termination where failure to comply with a consumer guarantee cannot be remedied. Section 267(3) provides: (3) If the failure to comply with the guarantee cannot be remedied or is a major failure, the consumer may: (a) terminate the contract for the supply of the services; or
[page 252] (b) by action against the supplier, recover compensation for any reduction in the value of the services below the price paid or payable by the consumer for the services.
Therefore, s 267(3) confers a right of termination where failure to comply with a consumer guarantee cannot be remedied. In addition, the impact of s 267(2)(b) of the Australian Consumer Law is to entitle a consumer to terminate a contract for the supply of services where the supplier does not comply with a requirement (by the consumer) that the supplier remedy the failure to comply with the consumer guarantee within a reasonable time. Section 269 of the Australian Consumer Law states how termination of a contract for the supply of services to a consumer takes effect under the Australian Consumer Law. When a supplier of services fails to comply with a consumer guarantee, several rights to compensation are conferred by the Australian Consumer Law. First, under s 267(2), the consumer may recover all reasonable costs incurred in having the failure remedied where the supplier refuses to do so. Second, where there is a major failure, or a failure which cannot be remedied, s 267(3) confers an option on the consumer to terminate the contract, or to recover compensation for any reduction in the value of the services below the price paid or payable by the consumer for the services. A third right to compensation is stated in s 269(3) of the Australian Consumer Law, which applies if a contract for the supply of services to a consumer is terminated. [11-37] Consequential loss. So far as damages under the Australian Consumer Law are concerned, in addition to specific measures of loss, a consumer is entitled to recover what are conceived of as damages for ‘consequential loss’ — although that description is not used in the legislation. In relation to a failure of goods to comply with a consumer guarantee, s 259(4) of the Australian Consumer Law states:152 The consumer may, by action against the supplier, recover damages for any loss or damage suffered by the consumer because of the failure to comply with the guarantee if it was reasonably foreseeable that the consumer would suffer such loss or damage as a result of such a failure.
Exactly the same words are used, in relation to contracts for the supply of services, in s 267(4) of the Australian Consumer Law.153
Therefore, in addition to a consumer’s other entitlements to recover as damages (to the extent stated in the Australian Consumer Law) general and specific losses, the consumer is entitled to recover consequential loss. In ss 259(4) and 267(4) this is expressed in the right of the consumer to [page 253] recover ‘any loss or damage … it was reasonably foreseeable that the consumer would suffer’. ‘Reasonably foreseeable’ loss or damage is a very broad concept more familiar in the context of breach of a duty of care than the breach of a strict duty analogous to a contractual duty. It is generally considered that the test of remoteness of damage under the rule in Hadley v Baxendale154 is narrower than that applicable where damages are sought in tort for breach of a duty of care.155 But most of the consumer guarantees in the Australian Consumer Law create strict duties. Two other points of difficulty may be noted. First, there is no indication of whether the Australian Consumer Law’s criterion of ‘reasonably foreseeable’ loss or damage is applied at the time when the contract for the supply of goods or services was entered into, or at the time when the consumer guarantee is not complied with. A contract analogy suggests the former. Second, when the concept of ‘reasonably foreseeable’ loss or damage is applied to the tort of negligence, the impact is to enable a plaintiff to recover out-of-pocket losses and consequential loss. But assessment is generally on a reliance basis, rather than on an expectation basis. In contrast, in a breach of contract claim the plaintiff is entitled to have damages assessed on an expectation basis. The Australian Consumer Law is unclear whether a consumer is entitled to recover damages on an expectation basis for failure to comply with a consumer guarantee. For ‘genuine’ consumers that is hardly likely to be an issue, even in relation to economic loss. However, where the consumer is a corporation which has acquired goods or services in the course of a business, it will generally prefer to have damages assessed on an expectation basis. 1.
See [10-18].
2.
See [11-25].
3.
Glanville Williams, ‘Language and the Law — IV’ (1945) 61 LQR 384 at 401.
4.
Heimann v The Commonwealth (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 691 at 695; Luxor (Eastbourne) Ltd v Cooper [1941] AC 108 at 137.
5.
See Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337; 41 ALR 367. Cf Reid v Rush and Tompkins Group Plc [1990] 1 WLR 212 (employment contract).
6.
Frobisher (Second Investments) Ltd v Kiloran Trust Co Ltd [1980] 1 WLR 425 at 432.
7.
See [11-25].
8.
Heimann v The Commonwealth (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 691 at 695–6. See also Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd v Carlton & United Breweries Ltd (1987) 10 NSWLR 468.
9.
See [14-22]–[14-25].
10.
Re Comptoir Commercial Anversois and Power Son & Co [1920] 1 KB 868; Heimann v The Commonwealth (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 691 at 695.
11.
See [12-19]. See generally on the parol evidence rule [12-19]–[12-23].
12.
See the recent discussion in Attorney General of Belize v Belize Telecom Ltd [2009] 1 WLR 1988 at 1993ff; [2009] UKPC 10 at [19]ff.
13.
See [12-13].
14.
See [12-19].
15.
See [11-20].
16.
Commonwealth Trading Bank of Australia v Sydney Wide Stores Pty Ltd (1981) 148 CLR 304; 35 ALR 513 (see J W Carter (1982) 98 LQR 19). But there is no duty to examine accounts: Tai Hing Cotton Mill Ltd v Liu Chong Hing Bank Ltd [1986] AC 80.
17.
See ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 34; NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 33; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 33; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 32; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 30; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 35; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 37; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 30.
18.
See [28-09].
19.
See, eg Mackay v Dick (1881) 6 App Cas 251 at 263.
20.
See, eg Ray v Davies (1909) 9 CLR 160 at 170; Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 449; 131 ALR 422. But see Shell UK Ltd v Lostock Garage Ltd [1977] 1 All ER 481 at 487.
21.
See Khoury v Government Insurance Office of New South Wales (1984) 165 CLR 622; 54 ALR 639; Bank of Nova Scotia v Hellenic Mutual War Risks Association (Bermuda) Ltd (The Good Luck) [1992] 1 AC 233.
22.
See Port Swettenham Authority v T W Wu & Co [1979] AC 580.
23.
H K Lücke, ‘Ad Hoc Implications in Written Contracts’ (1973) 5 Adel LR 32; John McCaughran, ‘Implied Terms: The Journey of The Man on the Clapham Omnibus’ [2011] CLJ 607.
24.
(1977) 180 CLR 266 at 282–3; 16 ALR 363 (approved Secured Income Real Estate (Australia) Ltd v St Martins Investments Pty Ltd (1979) 144 CLR 596 at 605–6; 26 ALR 567; Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337 at 347).
25.
Wright v TNT Management Pty Ltd (1989) 85 ALR 442 at 459.
26.
Vroon BV v Foster’s Brewing Group Ltd [1994] 2 VR 32 at 68.
27.
[2009] 1 WLR 1988 at 1995; [2009] UKPC 10 at [27]. See Kelvin F K Low and Kelry C F Loi, (2009) 125 LQR 561; Elizabeth Macdonald, (2009) 26 JCL 97; Chris Peters, [2009] CLJ 513.
28.
(1995) 185 CLR 410 at 422, 442 (see Gregory Tolhurst and J W Carter, ‘The New Law on Implied Terms’ (1996) 11 JCL 76). See also Breen v Williams (1996) 186 CLR 71; 138 ALR 259 (see J W
Carter and G J Tolhurst (1997) 12 JCL 152; Jane Swanton and Barbara McDonald (1997) 71 ALJ 332 and 413). 29.
(1988) 164 CLR 539 at 573; 78 ALR 69. See also Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp (1984) 156 CLR 41 at 121.
30.
See, eg Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp (1984) 156 CLR 41 at 139.
31.
(1928) 41 CLR 316.
32.
(1928) 41 CLR 316 at 324. Contrast Finchbourne Ltd v Rodrigues [1976] 3 All ER 581.
33.
See also O’Donnell v Thor Industries Pty Ltd (1977) 136 CLR 296; 14 ALR 61; Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp (1984) 156 CLR 41 at 95.
34.
Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp (1984) 156 CLR 41; Hughes v Greenwich London Borough Council [1994] 1 AC 170.
35.
See, eg Bell v Lever Bros Ltd [1932] AC 161 at 226; Heimann v The Commonwealth (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 691 at 695; Australian Meat Industry Employees’ Union v Frugalis Pty Ltd [1990] 2 Qd R 201; CGU Workers Compensation (NSW) Ltd v Garcia (2007) 69 NSWLR 680 at 706; [2007] NSWCA 193 at [143].
36.
Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp (1984) 156 CLR 41 at 66.
37.
(1889) 14 PD 64.
38.
(1889) 14 PD 64 at 68.
39.
See also Shepherd v Felt and Textiles of Australia Ltd (1931) 45 CLR 359.
40.
See [28-09]–[28-10].
41.
(1982) 149 CLR 600; 43 ALR 68.
42.
See also Butts v O’Dwyer (1952) 87 CLR 267.
43.
[1939] 2 KB 206 (affirmed sub nom Southern Foundries (1926) Ltd v Shirlaw [1940] AC 701).
44.
[1939] 2 KB 206 at 227.
45.
[1941] AC 108. Cf L J Hooker Ltd v W J Adams Estates Pty Ltd (1977) 138 CLR 52; 13 ALR 161.
46.
[1981] QB 290 (see J W Carter (1982) 45 MLR 220). See also Moneywood Pty Ltd v Salamon Nominees Pty Ltd (2001) 202 CLR 351 at 359–60, 374–5; 177 ALR 390 at 395–6, 407 (terms implied in law in estate agency contracts). See further [37-02].
47.
But cf L French & Co Ltd v Leeston Shipping Co Ltd [1922] 1 AC 451.
48.
See also BP Refinery (Westernport) Pty Ltd v Shire of Hastings (1977) 180 CLR 266.
49.
See, eg Terkol Rederierne v Petroleo Brasileiro SA (The Badagry) [1985] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 395 at 401.
50.
(1982) 149 CLR 337 (see J W Carter [1983] CLJ 199). See also Con-Stan Industries of Australia Pty Ltd v Norwich Winterthur Insurance (Australia) Ltd (1986) 160 CLR 226 at 24; 64 ALR 481. Cf Shell UK Ltd v Lostock Garage Ltd [1977] 1 All ER 481.
51.
See, eg Sanders v Snell (1998) 196 CLR 329; 157 ALR 491.
52.
See also John Alexander’s Clubs Pty Ltd v White City Tennis Club Ltd (2010) 241 CLR 1 at 36; 266 ALR 462 at 484; [2010] HCA 19 at [92].
53.
(1931) 45 CLR 359. Contrast Moorhouse v Angus and Robertson (No 1) Pty Ltd [1981] 1 NSWLR 700.
54.
The term may have been of the implied in law variety, but the position is the same with regard to consistency; see [11-16].
55.
(1910) 10 CLR 417.
56.
(1910) 10 CLR 417 at 421.
57.
(1910) 10 CLR 417 at 427.
58.
(1910) 10 CLR 417 at 430. Cf Lewis v Bell (1985) 1 NSWLR 731 at 736.
59.
See Equitable Life Assurance Society v Hyman [2002] 1 AC 408 at 458–9.
60.
Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd v Carlton & United Breweries Ltd (1987) 10 NSWLR 468 at 487.
61.
See Scally v Southern Health and Social Services Board [1992] 1 AC 294 (see Peter Brereton (1992) 5 JCL 264); Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 450; Esso Australia Resources Ltd v Plowman (1995) 183 CLR 10; 128 ALR 391; University of Western Australia v Gray (2009) 259 ALR 224 at 254; [2009] FCAFC 116 at [142]. See Elisabeth Peden, ‘Policy Concerns in Terms Implied in Law’ (2001) 117 LQR 459.
62.
See J F Burrows, ‘Implied Terms and Presumptions’ (1968) 3 NZULR 121.
63.
Re Comptoir Commercial Anversois and Power Son & Co [1920] 1 KB 868; Heimann v The Commonwealth (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 691 at 695.
64.
See [11-02].
65.
See, eg Liverpool City Council v Irwin [1977] AC 239.
66.
Lister v Romford Ice and Cold Storage Co Ltd [1957] AC 555 at 576.
67.
Greaves & Co (Contractors) Ltd v Baynham Meikle & Partners [1975] 1 WLR 1095 at 1099. Cf Central Exchange Ltd v Anaconda Nickel Ltd (2001) 24 WAR 382 at 391.
68.
See, eg Luxor (Eastbourne) Ltd v Cooper [1941] AC 108 at 137; Khoury v Government Insurance Office of New South Wales (1984) 165 CLR 622 at 635–6; Australis Media Holdings Pty Ltd v Telstra Corp Ltd (1998) 43 NSWLR 104 at 123. For discussion see Jane Swanton, ‘Implied Contractual Terms: Further Implications of Hawkins v Clayton’ (1992) 5 JCL 127.
69.
Simonius Vischer & Co v Holt [1979] 2 NSWLR 322 at 348. See also University of Western Australia v Gray (2009) 259 ALR 224 at 255; [2009] FCAFC 116 at [145].
70.
For the impact of statute see [11-23]–[11-24].
71.
Lister v Romford Ice and Cold Storage Co Ltd [1957] AC 555. See also Faccenda Chicken Ltd v Fowler [1987] Ch 117 (implied duty of good faith or fidelity). There may also be an obligation to provide a safe system of work: Wright v TNT Management Pty Ltd (1989) 85 ALR 442 at 459.
72.
See, eg Breen v Williams (1996) 186 CLR 71 (doctor); Carew Counsel Pty Ltd v French (2002) 4 VR 172 at 185; 190 ALR 690 (solicitor). See further [29-17].
73.
See, eg the discussion in Palmer, Palmer on Bailment, 3rd ed, 2009, pp 47ff.
74.
G H Myers & Co v Brent Cross Service Co [1934] 1 KB 46 at 55 (approved Young & Marten Ltd v McManus Childs Ltd [1969] 1 AC 454; adopted Reg Glass Pty Ltd v Rivers Locking Systems Pty Ltd (1968) 120 CLR 516).
75.
[1969] 1 AC 480.
76.
See [11-14].
77.
(1935) 35 SR (NSW) 469. See also Helicopter Sales (Australia) Pty Ltd v Rotor-Work Pty Ltd (1974) 132 CLR 1; 4 ALR 77. Contrast Criss v Alexander (1928) 28 SR (NSW) 297.
78.
Cf May and Butcher Ltd v R (1929) [1934] 2 KB 17n.
79.
See, eg Tai Hing Cotton Mill Ltd v Liu Chong Hing Bank Ltd [1986] AC 80; Hawkins v Clayton (1988) 164 CLR 539; Scally v Southern Health and Social Services Board [1992] 1 AC 294. Cf
University of Western Australia v Gray (2009) 259 ALR 224 at 252; [2009] FCAFC 116 at [138]. 80.
See [29-15].
81.
See also Bank of Nova Scotia v Hellenic Mutual War Risks Association (Bermuda) Ltd (The Good Luck) [1992] 1 AC 233.
82.
See Astley v Austrust Ltd (1999) 197 CLR 1 at 21–3; 161 ALR 155 (approving Henderson v Merrett Syndicates Ltd [1995] 2 AC 145 at 193–4 and disapproving Hawkins v Clayton (1988) 164 CLR 539 at 585). See Barbara McDonald, ‘Solicitors’ Liability: Tort, Contract or Both?’ (1991) 4 JCL 121.
83.
See further [29-17].
84.
See also ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 17; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 17; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 15; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 12; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 17; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 17; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 12.
85.
See, eg Rowland v Divall [1923] 2 KB 50 (see [38-06]).
86.
For the distinction between conditions and warranties see [13-03]–[13-07].
87.
See Brian Coote, ‘Correspondence with Description in the Law of Sale of Goods’ (1976) 50 ALJ 17.
88.
See also ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 18; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 18; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 16; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 13; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 18; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 18; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 13.
89.
See Harlingdon and Leinster Enterprises Ltd v Christopher Hull Fine Art Ltd [1991] 1 QB 564 (see Ian Brown (1990) 106 LQR 561).
90.
[1911] AC 394.
91.
It was, in addition, a sale by sample.
92.
See Grant v Australian Knitting Mills Ltd [1936] AC 85 at 100.
93.
See Ashington Piggeries Ltd v Christopher Hill Ltd [1972] AC 441.
94.
See Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar Hansen-Tangen [1976] 1 WLR 989 at 998.
95.
See, eg Arcos Ltd v E A Ronaasen & Son [1933] AC 470.
96.
Couchman v Hill [1947] KB 554 at 559, as interpreted in Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar HansenTangen [1976] 1 WLR 989.
97.
See also ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 19(2); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 19(a); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 17(1); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 14(a); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 19(a); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 19(a); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 14(i).
98.
This is, however, subject to a proviso ‘that in the case of a contract for the sale of a specified article under its patent or other trade name there is no implied condition as to its fitness for any particular purpose’. The proviso has been narrowly interpreted. See, eg Grant v Australian Knitting Mills Ltd [1936] AC 85 at 99.
99.
[1905] 1 KB 608.
100. See generally on standard of duty [29-13]–[29-17]. 101. Cammell Laird & Co Ltd v Manganese Bronze and Brass Co Ltd [1934] AC 402. 102. See also ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 19(4); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 19(b); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 17(2); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895 s 14(b); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 19(b); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 19(b); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 14(ii). Cf Sale of Goods Act 1979 (UK), s 14(2), under which an implied term of ‘satisfactory quality’ replaces the merchantable quality term.
103. See [11-19]. 104. See Ashington Piggeries Ltd v Christopher Hill Ltd [1972] AC 441. 105. [1936] AC 85. 106. [1936] AC 85 at 99–100. 107. See, eg Henry Kendall & Sons v William Lillico & Sons Ltd [1969] 2 AC 31. 108. See, eg Ashington Piggeries Ltd v Christopher Hill Ltd [1972] AC 441. 109. Section 64(4). 110. See also Goods Act 1958 (Vic), s 89(2). 111. In England, the implied term of ‘satisfactory quality’ (which replaces the merchantable quality term) is described in s 14(2A) of the Sale of Goods Act 1979 (UK). 112. See Henry Kendall & Sons v William Lillico & Sons Ltd [1969] 2 AC 31. 113. See M/S Aswan Engineering Establishment Co v Lupdine Ltd [1987] 1 WLR 1 at 14. See also Harlingdon and Leinster Enterprises Ltd v Christopher Hull Fine Art Ltd [1991] 1 QB 564. 114. See Rogers v Parish (Scarborough) Ltd [1987] QB 933; Cavalier Marketing (Australia) Pty Ltd v Rasell (1990) 96 ALR 375 (see Kenneth Sutton (1991) 4 JCL 235). 115. See also ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 20; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 20; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 18; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 15; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 20; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 20; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 15. 116. See, eg J S Robertson (Aust) Pty Ltd v Martin (1956) 94 CLR 30. 117. (1962) 107 CLR 633. 118. (1962) 107 CLR 633 at 649. 119. See further Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, §2-51. 120. See [11-14]. 121. See [11-23]. 122. See [13-11]. 123. See Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 440. 124. Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th ed, 1974, Vol 9, para 353. See also Majeau Carrying Co Pty Ltd v Coastal Rutile Ltd (1973) 129 CLR 48 at 61; 1 ALR 1. 125. [1931] 1 Ch 310. 126. (1986) 160 CLR 226. See also Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 423. 127. (1918) 25 CLR 144 (affirmed (1919) 26 CLR 180). 128. See also Rosenhain v Commonwealth Bank of Australia (1922) 31 CLR 46 at 53; Con-Stan Industries of Australia Pty Ltd v Norwich Winterthur Insurance (Australia) Ltd (1986) 160 CLR 226 at 236–7. 129. Re Nudgee Bakery Pty Ltd’s Agreement [1971] Qd R 24. 130. See General Reinsurance Corp v Forsakringsaktiebolaget Fennia Patria [1983] QB 856. See also Libyan Arab Foreign Bank v Bankers Trust Co [1989] QB 728. 131. See Carter, Contract and the Australian Consumer Law: A Guide, 2012, ch 2. 132. On the Australian Consumer Law see [1-21]–[1-22]. 133. However, that may be addressed in State and Territory legislation adopting the Australian Consumer
Law. 134. A person may be a consumer with respect to part, but not all, of the goods and services supplied under a mixed supply contract. See further [11-32]. 135. This is subject to another exception (in s 3(2) of the Australian Consumer Law), applicable where goods are acquired for the purpose of using them up, or transforming them, in trade or commerce. 136. But see Australian Consumer Law, s 65. 137. See [11-28]. 138. See Australian Consumer Law, s 2(1). 139. See Australian Consumer Law, s 63. 140. See Australian Consumer Law, s 3(10). 141. See [11-29]. 142. This is defined as ‘a sale by auction that is conducted by an agent of the person (whether the agent acts in person or by electronic means)’: Australian Consumer Law, s 2(1). 143. See [11-18]–[11-22]. 144. See [11-33]–[11-37]. 145. See Australian Consumer Law, s 59. 146. See Chapter 10. 147. For the common law, see [11-14]. 148. See Australian Consumer Law, s 3(11) (there is a ‘mixed supply’ if goods or services are purchased or acquired together with other property or services, or together with both other property and other services). 149. See Chapter 19. 150. See Australian Consumer Law, s 265 (termination of contracts for the supply of services that are connected with rejected goods) and Australian Consumer Law, s 270 (termination of contracts for the supply of goods that are connected with terminated services). 151. See Chapter 13. 152. Section 259(5) of the Australian Consumer Law states that s 259(4) does not apply if the failure to comply with the guarantee occurred only because of a cause independent of human control that occurred after the goods left the control of the supplier. But s 259(6) of the Australian Consumer Law states that s 259(4) applies in addition to s 259(2) and (3). 153. Section 267(5) of the Australian Consumer Law states that s 267(4) applies in addition to s 267(2) and (3). 154. (1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151. 155. See Chapter 35.
[page 254]
Chapter 12
Construction Principles [12-01] Meaning of ‘construction’. We explored in the previous two chapters the processes by which courts identify the terms agreed upon by the parties. Having arrived at the position where the terms of the contract are known, it is now necessary to consider the impact which those terms have. This is achieved by interpreting the words used; a process known as construction of the contract. ‘Construction’ describes two things:1 determining the meaning of words used to express the terms of the contract; and the means by which particular legal effects are ascribed to the terms which make up a contract. Once the meaning and legal effect of the terms are known, effect is given to the parties’ intention by applying the contract to the facts. In most cases the determination of meaning requires no more than a reading of the contract in its context. Because meaning refers to the linguistic significance of words, prior decisions on the meaning of terms in other contracts are not likely to be particularly helpful. But when we move from meaning to legal effect the process of construction becomes more dynamic. Construction here is much more concerned with rights and remedies created by the contract. Experience shows that legal effect is seldom discovered by a mere reading of a document; an understanding of case law is frequently necessary. In the context of commercial contracts, whether the issue is one of meaning or leal effect, courts strive to give effect to the principles of ‘commercial construction’. This is a convenient description of the characteristics most frequently displayed in the modern approach to the construction of commercial contracts. These include:2 proper use of the context of the contract, that is, the factual (and legal) matrix; and a preference for constructions which are reasonable or sensible and not unreasonable, absurd or inconvenient.
As Gleeson CJ explained in International Air Transport Association v Ansett Australia Holdings Ltd:3 [page 255] In giving a commercial contract a businesslike interpretation, it is necessary to consider the language used by the parties, the circumstances addressed by the contract, and the objects which it is intended to secure … . An appreciation of the commercial purpose of a contract calls for an understanding of the genesis of the transaction, the background, and the market … .
[12-02] Issue of law. Where the contract is expressed or evidenced (wholly or partly) in a document, ‘construction’ raises an issue of law not fact.4 The basis for this rule is historical rather than logical. Lord Diplock once described it as a ‘legacy of the system of trial by juries who might not all be literate’.5 Although contract disputes are not tried with a jury, the meaning (and legal effect) of a document is still treated as an issue of law.6 [12-03] Construction and intention. The primary ‘object’7 of construction is to determine and give effect to the common intention of the parties.8 Thus, when a court construes a contract it does so in order to determine and give effect to the intention of the parties. Intention may be actual, expressed or implied: ‘Actual’ intention is the intention subjectively (actually) held by the parties. ‘Expressed’ intention is the intention expressly stated by the parties in the contract. ‘Implied’ (or inferred or imputed) intention is the intention which is attributed to the parties in relation to matters on which no intention has been expressed. When it is said that construction depends on the ‘intention’ of the parties it is clear that the word is being used objectively.9 References to intention are not to the parties’ actual intentions, still less to their desires, aspirations or expectations.10 ‘Intention’ therefore refers to expressed intention, to be ascertained from the words used.11 The relevant ‘question to be answered always is, “What is the meaning of what the parties have said?” not, “What did the parties mean to say?” … it being a presumption [of law] … that the parties intended to say that which they have said’.12 The rule states a presumption that the parties’ expressed intention is their actual intention. Where no intention is expressed, intention must be determined by
[page 256] inference or implication. It will be implied, inferred or imputed on the basis of the words used, read in context and in the light of the contract as a whole and the relevant principles of law. This is an objective inquiry. Therefore, whether the concern is with expressed or inferred intention, ‘intention’ refers to what a reasonable person in the position of the party to whom the words were addressed would regard as the other party’s intention.13 It may seem peculiar, even absurd, that in determining what parties intended by their contract their actual intention should not be considered relevant. This approach is readily explained at the time of its development, since the parties to an action were not originally permitted to give evidence in court.14 But the fact that the parties may now give evidence has not changed the law, although it has resulted in a greater reliance on the context of the contract. Perhaps the main virtue of the rule is that it protects the integrity of the bargain. Contracts very frequently affect third parties. It would be wrong to allow the rights of such persons to be denied by permitting the parties to contradict the intention expressed in their document. The approach also serves to control evidence in court, where a great deal of time might be wasted in hearing what the parties thought their contract meant. The purpose of the doctrine of rectification, considered later,15 is to allow parties to have documents which do not accurately record their bargain corrected. But the law does not allow a party to deny an accurate expression merely on the basis that the contract does not reflect that party’s subjective understanding of the words chosen. In any event, ‘construction’ is directed to legal effect as well as linguistic meaning, and evidence of what lay people understood as the legal significance of words in a contract cannot control the effect of their bargain. [12-04] Approach to construction: issues for analysis. It is essential, given the objective approach to contract construction, that the courts adopt a sensible approach. Their function is to give effect to the bargain, not to deny its efficacy by a restrictive technical analysis. This finds its expression in a number of ways. For example, as a general rule, where a contract is construed the court will apply a presumption that the parties did not intend its terms to operate unreasonably.16 Therefore, where a particular construction would achieve an unreasonable result the court will be reluctant to accept that this was intended by the parties.17 Nevertheless, the court has no jurisdiction to reject an interpretation, clearly
intended by the parties, merely because it is in its view unreasonable or because it produces unreasonable results.18 [page 257] Second, a commonsense approach must be taken, particularly in commercial contracts which are expressed in an imperfectly constructed document. Thus, Lord Diplock has said19 that ‘if detailed semantic and syntactical analysis of words in a commercial contract is going to lead to a conclusion that flouts business commonsense, it must be made to yield to business commonsense’. Third, there must be rules governing the forensic material which can be received to assist in the construction process. The role of context in determining meaning must be fully acknowledged. Linguists have, of course, emphasised this point as crucial; lawyers have recognised it only recently.20 The issues referred to above are general ones, relevant to both meaning and legal effect. The general approach today is to apply the same construction rules no matter what the form or nature of the clause or contract. In other words, the relevant principles do not depend on whether the contract is for the sale of goods or the provision of services and so on. However, the nature of the contract must be taken into account when considering the parties’ intention, and some types of contracts and clauses still give rise to particular difficulties.21 Since construction issues arise in relation to all contracts, it is not possible to discuss all issues which may be framed in terms of construction in one chapter. Our concern is with three areas: the raw material which may be used to construe a contract;22 the classification of contractual terms;23 and the construction of exclusion clauses.24
The Parol Evidence Rule25 Formulations of the Rule [12-05] Introduction. One of the least satisfactory chapters in the law of
contract concerns what is referred to as the parol evidence rule. It is usually spoken of as a well-understood, even clearly defined concept, yet in fact it is possible to find various formulations of the rule. The formulation of Lord [page 258] Blackburn in Inglis v John Buttery & Co,26 was adopted by Isaacs J in Gordon v Macgregor.27 Lord Blackburn said:28 Now, I think it is quite fixed — and no more wholesome or salutary rule relative to written contracts can be devised — that where parties agree to embody, and do actually embody, their contract in a formal written deed, then in determining what the contract really was and really meant, a court must look to the formal deed and to that deed alone. That is only carrying out the will of the parties.
In its working paper on the parol evidence rule, the Law Commission identified29 three rules which, either separately or together, have been referred to as the parol evidence rule. The first rule says that where a document exists, other evidence of the terms of the document is not admissible. The second rule prohibits evidence of other terms not included ‘expressly or by reference’ in the document. The third rule excludes evidence of ‘its writer’s intended meaning’. The conclusion of the Law Commission, in its final report,30 was that the second rule, if it ever existed, no longer exists as a rule of contract law. In so far as the rules do in fact operate (which seems to be the Australian position), it is important to appreciate that the first is a rule of evidence rather than one of contract law. It is concerned with the exclusiveness of the writing. On the other hand, the second rule, if valid, expresses the conclusiveness of the document as to the terms agreed between the parties. It is a rule of contract law and not a rule of evidence. The third rule is also a substantive one. Even so, the courts have not drawn a sharp distinction between the second and third rules. For example, the formulation in Inglis v John Buttery & Co is, in effect, an amalgam of the two. [12-06] A suggested formulation. The parol evidence rule is a rule which restricts the use of extrinsic evidence. The concept of extrinsic evidence depends on the purpose for which the evidence is sought to be used.31 Where the question is whether extrinsic evidence may be used to prove the terms of the bargain, extrinsic evidence refers to evidence to prove terms additional to those stated in the document which is put forward as the contract. However, evidence is extrinsic evidence only where the contract has been
‘integrated’ in the document. To appreciate this aspect of the parol evidence rule it is necessary to consider how the parol evidence rule is applied.32 [page 259] The other purpose for which the evidence may be sought to be used is as an aid to the interpretation of a document. In this context there are three categories of extrinsic evidence: (1) direct evidence of the actual (subjective) intentions of the parties; (2) evidence of the parties’ prior negotiations; and (3) evidence of the parties’ subsequent conduct. This aspect of the rule is more general: it does not depend on whether the document integrates the parties’ bargain.33 It has the result that the principal aid to interpretation of a document is the factual matrix.34 That includes the legal background against which the parties contracted.35 To return to the formulation approved by Isaacs J in Gordon v Macgregor,36 the idea that the parol evidence rule is applied to determine ‘what the contract really was’ is a narrow one because it assumes that the parties have adopted a document as a complete statement of the contract. On the other hand, in relation to evidence of what was ‘really meant’ by the document (including the legal effect of the document) the scope of the parol evidence rule is much broader.
Application of the Parol Evidence Rule37 [12-07] Establishing the terms of the bargain. Where the parties have brought a contractual document into existence, one aspect of the process of term identification is affected by the parol evidence rule. This is where one party seeks to prove that a pre-contractual statement not reproduced in the document was nevertheless intended to operate as a term of the contract. There are cases in which the parol evidence rule has been applied to restrict evidence of the terms of the contract. In L G Thorne & Co Pty Ltd v Thomas Borthwick & Sons (A’Asia) Ltd38 buyers under a contract for the sale of certain drums of neatsfoot oil claimed damages because the oil supplied was not equal to a sample given by the sellers prior to the contract being entered into. The buyers wanted to prove
that the contract was a sale by sample.39 However, the memorandum of the contract made no reference to the sale being by sample and a majority of the court held that evidence which might show that this was a term of the contract was excluded by the parol evidence rule. A different majority of the court held that the rule did not operate to prevent the reception of extrinsic evidence establishing that the buyers entered into a collateral contract containing a promise that the oil delivered would be equal to the sample supplied. A new trial, limited to this issue, was justified as it had not been considered by the trial judge. [page 260] It need hardly be said that this conclusion lacked logic, and had no effect other than to cause increased expense for the parties. The majority’s approach no longer represents the law, and the dissenting judgment of Herron J should now be applied.40 He said:41 The writing must in a proper case be compared with the negotiations, which must be provisionally received in evidence, before it can safely be said what was covered by the suggested final writing. Thus, the applicability of the [parol evidence] rule and the effect of the rule are distinct things.
Alternatively, as McHugh JA expressed it in State Rail Authority of New South Wales v Heath Outdoor Pty Ltd,42 the parol evidence rule has ‘no operation until it is first determined’ that all the terms of the contract are in writing. On this approach it is proper for the court to receive evidence of the prior negotiations to decide what terms expressed the contract before applying the parol evidence rule. In England, the Court of Appeal in J Evans & Son (Portsmouth) Ltd v Andrea Merzario Ltd43 applied the same approach as Herron J in Thorne. The plaintiffs imported a moulding machine in a container which was lost during the voyage from Rotterdam to Tilbury. They had employed the defendants as forwarding agents to make the necessary transport arrangements. In the past transport had been arranged in crates stored below deck, and when the defendants proposed a change to container transport they assured the plaintiffs that containers containing the plaintiffs’ goods would not be carried on deck. However, the machine in question had been placed in a container which was carried on deck and that was the reason for the plaintiffs’ loss. Roskill LJ said:44 ‘The court is entitled to look at and should look at all the evidence from start to finish in order to see what the bargain was that was struck between the parties’. In those
circumstances the court held that the assurance by the defendants had contractual effect. In Hope v RCA Photophone of Australia Pty Ltd,45 Latham CJ said that ‘there are exceptional cases where the parties to a contract have not expressed all the terms of their contract in writing, and, accordingly, parol evidence is admitted to complete the written contract’. However, there is no reason to describe this process as always being exceptional. In truth, it is merely part of the process of discovering the terms of the bargain. In fact, many of the cases which have hitherto been treated as exceptions to the parol evidence rule should now be treated as part of the process of term identification. The classic example is Pym v Campbell46 where evidence of an oral condition precedent47 to formation was treated as receivable under [page 261] an exception to the parol evidence rule. The better view is that whether a document is binding as a contract is not an issue determined by application of the rule, and may (where necessary) be determined objectively by extrinsic evidence.48 [12-08] The concept of integration. A contractual document may be executed with the intention of superseding entirely all prior negotiations in relation to the subject matter dealt with by the document.49 The effect of such a document is to integrate the bargain in written form.50 Such a document discharges any prior oral agreement, evidence of which becomes inadmissible because of the parol evidence rule. A second form of integration is where a document embodies the parties’ agreement without discharging a prior oral agreement. The document is conclusive evidence of the contract or that part recorded in writing.51 Two illustrations may be given to show the difference between the two types of integration. First, assume that A rings an airline and books a seat on a plane from Sydney to London. The next day A pays the fare and receives a ticket which A and the airline expressly agree upon as stating all the terms of the contract. The ticket is the written contract and the contract made over the telephone is completely discharged.52 Second, assume that B and C have dealt with each other for many years in transactions for the sale of fish food. Always, when the goods are delivered, B
receives C’s invoice which has a number of terms. If B orders goods from C over the telephone, and these are subsequently delivered, the fact that the terms of the contract are embodied in the invoice does not imply that the contract is in writing. Rather, the contract is oral, but B is bound by the terms of the invoice by reason of the course of dealing.53 Confusion arises in the application of the parol evidence rule because of statements that where there is a document that looks to be contractual it should be presumed to be the contract. The parol evidence rule is then applied to exclude evidence to the contrary. Even if this approach is [page 262] accepted, the presumption is variable in force and may be rebutted.54 In Gillespie Bros & Co v Cheney Eggar & Co55 Lord Russell CJ said that: … although when the parties arrive at a definite written contract the implication or presumption is very strong that such contract is intended to contain all the terms of their bargain, it is a presumption only, and it is open to either of the parties to allege that there was, in addition to what appears in the written agreement, an antecedent express stipulation not intended by the parties to be excluded, but intended to continue in force with the express written agreement.
The parol evidence rule will not apply where the document in question is clearly neither the bargain nor the memorandum of the entire agreement between the parties,56 and the rule should not be used to exclude evidence that the document is not intended to integrate the contract. A contract may contain an express integration clause.57 These take various forms, including the ‘entire agreement’ provision commonly found in commercial contracts.58 For example, in Hope v RCA Photophone of Australia Pty Ltd,59 the document said that it was the ‘entire understanding’ of the parties with reference to the subject matter of the contract, and that the contract contained no terms other than those expressed. The High Court held that the clause was conclusive that the terms of the contract were as stated in the document.60
The Evidence Excluded [12-09] Extrinsic evidence need not be oral. Whether or not the document integrates the bargain, there are three categories of extrinsic evidence which, as
noted above,61 may not be used as an aid to interpretation: (1) direct evidence of the actual (subjective) intentions of the parties; (2) evidence of the parties’ prior negotiations; and (3) evidence of the parties’ subsequent conduct. The rule is not limited to oral extrinsic evidence, it applies also to documentary evidence. For example, evidence of the parties’ negotiations is considered to be extrinsic if contained in a letter, fax or email. [page 263] Australian law is the same as English law. The refusal to admit prior negotiations as a direct aid to the construction of documents was considered in detail by the House of Lords in Chartbrook Ltd v Persimmon Homes Ltd.62 It was decided to retain the rule. However, it has been abandoned in many other jurisdictions.63 And both prior negotiations and subsequent conduct are admissible if the contract is governed by the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods 1980.64 [12-10] Intention. Where the interpretation of a document is in issue, direct evidence of the intention of the parties is not admissible (it is also not relevant), and the expression of intention in the document must govern.65 [12-11] Prior negotiations.66 The negotiations of the parties prior to entry into the contract are excluded by the parol evidence rule and cannot be called in aid when interpreting the document.67 In Prenn v Simmonds68 Lord Wilberforce explained that the reason for excluding prior negotiations is ‘not a technical one or even mainly one of convenience … it is simply that such evidence is unhelpful’. Prior negotiations might be thought by lay people to provide evidence of what the parties intended, but to the lawyer they are unhelpful because of the difficulty of extracting a clear meaning from the divergent views expressed, and which are presumed to have been superseded by the execution of a final memorandum. It is also true that consideration of prior negotiations would prolong litigation and add to its expense. [12-12] Subsequent conduct.69 There is considerable authority for the proposition that, at least as a general rule, the subsequent conduct of the parties
cannot be used for the purpose of construing the terms of a written contract ex post facto.70 [page 264] Against this line of authority there is Watcham v Attorney-General of the East Africa Protectorate,71 where subsequent conduct was used to decide the scope of an ambiguous title to land. The decision has been relied on in Australia on a number of occasions. For example, in Farmer v Honan72 Isaacs and Rich JJ cited the case as authority for the proposition that the conduct of the parties may be used to ‘elucidate the contract, where its terms are doubtful’. In Howard Smith & Co Ltd v Varawa73 Griffith CJ said that on the question whether the parties had in fact concluded an agreement evidenced by written documents, ‘any statements or conduct’ on their part, after the date of alleged formation ‘inconsistent with the existence of a concluded contract’ were relevant. However, there is a difference between evidence which may be used to prove a term of the contract — as in Varawa — and evidence to interpret terms set out in a document. In Agricultural and Rural Finance Pty Ltd v Gardiner,74 the High Court adopted the position taken in England where the law is clear that subsequent conduct cannot be used to interpret a contract. Thus, in L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd75 Lord Wilberforce described Watcham as a ‘precedent which … had long been recognised to be nothing but the refuge of the desperate’, and Watcham was confined to its own special facts. In so deciding the House of Lords confirmed the general proposition, expressed in James Miller & Partners Ltd v Whitworth Street Estates (Manchester) Ltd,76 that evidence of subsequent conduct is excluded from consideration in construction questions. The exclusion was there based on the view that the contract might be given one meaning on the day when the document comes into existence but another, and different, meaning during the course of performance because of what the parties have done. Indeed, its meaning might change more than once. From this perspective, the exclusion of subsequent conduct is simply an affirmation of the rule that the meaning and effect of a contract must (in the absence of an agreed variation)77 be determined once and for all at the time of agreement. Similarly, there is a difference between the use of subsequent conduct to construe a document and the use of such conduct to prove an estoppel. Because the evidence is not directed to the construction of the document or used to prove
that the contract includes a term not set out in a document,78 evidence of estoppel is not admitted under an exception to the parol evidence rule.79 [page 265]
Evidence of Context — the Factual Matrix [12-13] Factual matrix as context.80 In Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar Hansen-Tangen81 Lord Wilberforce explained that, when construing a contract, the court must ‘place itself in thought in the same factual matrix as that in which the parties were’ when the contract was made. Therefore, notwithstanding the parol evidence rule, the court must receive evidence of the circumstances surrounding the contract, and the aim, object or commercial purpose of the contract on the basis that it forms part of the factual matrix against which the parties contracted. In other words, all contracts must be construed with due regard to the factual matrix, that is, the context of the contract. That is a key ingredient of the process of commercial construction.82 The High Court adopted Lord Wilberforce’s approach in Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales.83 However, Mason J said84 that the word or expression at issue must be ‘susceptible of more than one meaning’ in order to justify the use of surrounding circumstances. Isaacs J had expressed the same view in Bacchus Marsh Concentrated Milk Co Ltd v Joseph Nathan & Co Ltd85 when he said that it is legitimate to adduce evidence of surrounding circumstances in order to prove that ‘words susceptible of more than one meaning are applicable to one only of those meanings’. The High Court has referred to the matter in several recent cases, and has maintained that the view stated in Codelfa remains good law.86 Since all contracts must be construed in context, and because virtually every English word or expression is capable of more than one meaning, evidence of context must always be admitted when determining the meaning or legal effect of the word or expression.87 Therefore, the point made in Codelfa seems to be that although evidence of context — whether termed the ‘factual matrix’ or ‘surrounding circumstances’ — must be
[page 266] taken into account, it cannot be used to contradict a document the meaning of which is clear.88 [12-14] Surrounding circumstances. The factual matrix is established by a consideration of the setting of the contract. Thus, in Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar Hansen-Tangen89 Lord Wilberforce said that no contracts are ‘made in a vacuum: there is always a setting in which they have to be placed’. The ‘surrounding circumstances’ represent this setting.90 However, the phrase is an ‘imprecise’ one, which Lord Wilberforce said can be ‘illustrated but hardly defined’. For example, in Bacon v Purcell91 a contract for the sale of cattle provided for delivery on or before 26 April. The Privy Council held, in the light of the circumstances surrounding the contract, that this meant that the seller had to be ready to begin delivery on 26 April and to complete it with all reasonable dispatch. Having regard to the quantity of cattle involved, and the place and conditions under which delivery was to take place, the parties could not have intended that all the cattle would be handed over on one day. Somewhat controversially, in Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales92 the High Court held that evidence of discussions between the parties to a construction contract, prior to the contract being executed, was admissible for the purpose of establishing the common understanding of the parties in relation to a matter of fact, namely, that work would be carried out on the basis of three eight-hour shifts per day. [12-15] Aim or object of contract. All contracting parties have some aim or object in mind when agreeing to contract, and entry into the contract is no doubt motivated by the view that their particular aim will be attained. Although direct evidence of aim or object cannot be received by the court, the circumstances surrounding the contract will frequently provide evidence, which is admissible, of what reasonable persons would have had in mind. For example, in Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar Hansen-Tangen93 a series of charterparties were entered into so as to make available to the charterers a medium sized tanker suitable for use as such. The terms of the charterparties to some extent confirmed this. It was contended that phrases which had been inserted in the charterparties, for example, ‘to be built by
[page 267] Osaka Shipbuilding Co Ltd’, took effect as contractual terms of description. However, when regard was had to the object and purpose of the charterparties it was clear that no particular significance was to be attached to the insertions, which were made for the purpose of identification: to enable the charterers of the vessel to locate it and, if they wished, to sub-dispose of it. The factual matrix included the fact that the vessel had not been constructed when the charterparties were entered into, and that the vessel could only be described by reference to such matters as its builder and place of construction. Accordingly, the insertions were not a necessary part of the contractual descriptions of the vessels. In any event, although it could also be said that it was built by another company, the vessel was built by Osaka since it planned, organised and directed the building of the vessel.
Exceptions to the Parol Evidence Rule [12-16] Introduction. Traditionally, expositions of the parol evidence rule have focused on a large number of exceptions to the rule. However, if the views expressed above are correct, the list of exceptions is in truth a small one. Thus, if we put to one side the approach to the parol evidence rule taken in cases such as LG Thorne & Co Pty Ltd v Thomas Borthwick & Sons (A’Asia) Ltd,94 exceptions must relate to evidence directed to the meaning or legal effect of words. Therefore, evidence relating to the validity or enforceability of the contract is unaffected by the parol evidence rule. Since the evidence does not relate to the meaning or legal effect of the words used, the parol evidence rule has no operation. Accordingly, evidence of matters such as incapacity, misrepresentation, mistake and illegality,95 or evidence as to the availability of remedies such as specific performance and injunction is not directed to construction, even if there is a document expressing the terms of the contract. Such evidence is outside the scope of the parol evidence rule, because the evidence is concerned with the ability of a party to enforce the document, or rights arising from the document. Similarly, evidence of matters subsequent to contract is also unaffected, unless it relates to the interpretation of the contract. Accordingly, evidence of breach of contract, a variation of the terms, or of conduct on the basis of which an estoppel is raised, all fall outside the rule.96
This suggests, as a basic criterion for concluding that an exception to the rule operates, a case in which a party is entitled to adduce extrinsic evidence of the meaning or scope of words or their legal effect. The chief examples of exceptions are therefore situations in which one party is permitted to give evidence of actual intention, prior negotiations or subsequent conduct for the purpose of construing the words in the [page 268] document. However, only very rarely is direct evidence of actual intention admissible. [12-17] Identification of the subject matter of the contract. Where the description of the subject matter of a contract is uncertain or ambiguous, the subject matter may be identified by extrinsic evidence.97 For example, in White v Australian and New Zealand Theatres Ltd98 a written contract between two theatrical artists and a theatre company stated that the ‘sole professional services’ of the artists had been engaged on certain terms. But the contract did not define what ‘sole professional services’ meant, and the High Court held that extrinsic evidence was properly admitted to establish that it included work in producing a revue to be staged by the theatre company. [12-18] Ambiguity in contract. Ambiguity may be ‘patent’, that is, apparent on the face of the document. Alternatively, it may be ‘latent’ because a word or description, superficially referring to one person or thing, is found to be equally applicable to more than one person or thing. In either case extrinsic evidence can be used to resolve the ambiguity. The rationale is that if the evidence were not admitted the contract (or at least the ambiguous part) would be void for uncertainty. Matthews v Smallwood99 illustrates patent ambiguity. A lease conferred a right of re-entry on the lessor for any breach by the lessee ‘of the covenant hereinbefore contained and on his part to be performed’. Since there were numerous covenants contained in the prior part of the deed, Parker J found a case of patent ambiguity. In order to resolve the ambiguity regard was had to the counterpart of the lease, which employed the plural ‘covenants’ and justified the conclusion that there was a clerical error in the lease. Accordingly, the right of re-entry came into operation on the breach by the lessee of any of the prior covenants.
Latent ambiguity was alleged in Hope v RCA Photophone of Australia Pty Ltd,100 where a lease of ‘electrical-sound reproduction equipment’ described in the schedule to the contract made no mention of whether the equipment was to be new or used. The contention of the defendant was that the plaintiffs were in breach by supplying equipment which was not new. Since the agreement did not describe the equipment as ‘new’ the defendant tried to establish, by extrinsic evidence, that the plaintiffs had promised to supply new equipment. But the court held that the general description of the subject matter did not create any ambiguity, and the extrinsic evidence could not be received. If a case of ambiguity is established, is the court entitled to receive evidence of the subsequent conduct of the parties in order to resolve the ambiguity? In Sinclair Scott & Co Ltd v Naughton,101 Isaacs J said that if there is any ambiguity in the document which lets in extrinsic evidence, conduct by which both parties concur in placing the same construction on [page 269] words that ‘are in themselves of doubtful construction, sometimes, but very rarely, may be accepted’. In Watcham v Attorney-General of the East Africa Protectorate102 the Privy Council went even further, saying that in the interpretation of a modern instrument in which there is ambiguity, either latent or patent, ‘evidence may be given of user under it to show the sense in which the parties to it used the language they have employed, and their intention in executing the instrument as revealed by their language interpreted in this sense’. The matter was considered in L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd.103 In that case a distributorship agreement made visits by Wickman to Schuler’s clients a ‘condition’ of the contract. Schuler contended that this meant that any failure by Wickman to visit Schuler’s clients would constitute a breach of an essential term of the contract. Wickman contended that the word ‘condition’ was ambiguous, and that the subsequent conduct of the parties could be used to interpret it. The choice of the word certainly gave rise to a difficulty of construction, because the word is used in so many senses.104 But it was unanimously held that subsequent conduct could not be used as an aid to interpretation. Even on the assumption that there was ambiguity, Lord Simon said105 that there were sound reasons for rejecting such evidence. First, it might be ‘misleading’ to allow evidence of subsequent conduct without also
considering direct evidence of the parties’ intentions, and the exclusion of prior negotiations implied that subsequent conduct had also to be excluded. Second, it could only be relevant to consider evidence of what the words in the document actually meant by what they said, but subsequent conduct might merely be referable to what the parties meant to say. Third, the ‘practical difficulties involved in admitting subsequent conduct as an aid to interpretation’ were said to be only ‘marginally, if at all, less than are involved in admitting evidence of prior negotiations’ which are excluded from consideration. It is not easy to reconcile these two lines of approach,106 but the answer may lie either in differing conceptions of what constitutes ambiguity or in the difference between construction to determine meaning and construction to determine legal effect. In Schuler the ambiguity was not such as to prevent a meaning being given to the word; rather it was in the nature of uncertainty as to the legal effect of the word used. There is in such a context no scope for an exception to the parol evidence rule since legal effect must be attributed on the basis of precedent.107 On the other hand, where there is a genuine case of ambiguity as to meaning, the court must [page 270] resolve the matter in some way, and it cannot (as in Schuler) rely on precedent to impute an intention. Unless the ambiguity is resolved the clause in question will be void for uncertainty. Since it is therefore necessary to give some meaning to the words, there seems no objection to the use of subsequent conduct, provided the conduct is mutual rather than unilateral.108 [12-19] Implied terms. Evidence of the factual matrix109 may be used in determining whether a term should be implied. However, it is not entirely clear how far extrinsic evidence may be received under an exception to the parol evidence rule. In considering whether a term should be implied in law110 the court may have regard to extrinsic evidence for the purpose of supporting or rebutting a presumption that the term should be implied. For example, in Gillespie Bros & Co v Cheney Eggar & Co111 evidence of a pre-contractual conversation between the parties was admitted for the purpose of showing that buyers of goods had expressly made known to the sellers the purpose for which the goods were required in such a way as to indicate reliance on the sellers’ skill or judgment.
This was because the buyers alleged the breach of a term requiring the goods to be fit for the buyers’ purpose which would only be implied if the buyers had made their purpose known in such a way as to indicate reliance on the sellers’ skill or judgment.112 Conversely, in Mears v Safecar Security Ltd,113 subsequent conduct was used to rebut the implication of a term providing for payment of wages to an employee during a period when he was absent from work through illness. It was not the policy of his employers to pay sick pay and the employee did not request payment during his illness. The position with regard to terms implied in fact was discussed by the High Court in Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales.114 It was held that evidence of discussions between the parties prior to entry into the contract had been properly admitted for the purpose of deciding whether a term was to be implied into the contract. Having regard to the existence of a formal document in that case it might be argued that the court applied an exception to the parol evidence rule. Moreover, Mason J said115 that prior negotiations of the parties were not admissible evidence. On the other hand, he was concerned to emphasise116 three points: (1) that the implication of a term is, in essence, a process of construction; [page 271] (2) that the prior discussions were not negotiations about the terms of the contract; (3) that the common understanding between the parties on the way in which performance would take place, evidenced by the prior discussions, was part of the factual background to the contract. Stephen J and Wilson J agreed with the analysis by Mason J and the other members of the court certainly did not take a wider view. This suggests that the court was restricting the admissible evidence to that justified by the factual matrix concept. It is not easy to see how regard can be had to the prior discussions of the parties while at the same time saying that implication is essentially a matter of construction. No doubt construction plays an important role in implication, particularly with respect to the requirement of consistency with express terms, but consideration of the requirement of obviousness may require the court to
have regard to the negotiations of the parties, because the officious bystander is deemed to be present during negotiations. This is, it is suggested, better explained by saying that the parol evidence rule does not apply to the implication process of term identification.117 Even if the parol evidence rule otherwise applies, there is no objection to the use of extrinsic evidence for the purpose of implying a term where the evidence is necessary to identify or explain the subject matter of the contract. Thus, in Shepperd v Ryde Corp118 a contract for the sale of land described it as being ‘part of the vendor’s Housing Project No 4’. The High Court held that reference to the project let in extrinsic evidence in order to ascertain the project and its features. When this evidence was considered it led to the implication of a term which operated in favour of the purchaser. The plan comprising the Housing Project referred to parkland (including that adjacent to the land purchased) reserved as an amenity for the common advantage of purchasers and justified the implication of a term obliging the Corporation to maintain the areas referred to as parkland. [12-20] Custom, usage and course of dealing. The requirements for implication of a term on the basis of custom or usage were explained earlier.119 The custom must be notorious, certain, legal and reasonable. If there is a document which does not express the custom or usage, and if the common meaning of the words stated is relied on, no evidence of custom or usage may be adduced.120 The fact that evidence of custom or usage is admissible in situations where some other meaning is relied on indicates that it does form an exception to the parol evidence rule. And if the document refers to a custom, but does not explain it, extrinsic evidence [page 272] may be received to explain the custom. However, the custom must be consistent with the express terms of the contract.121 Where parties have previously dealt with each other on a regular basis, so that there is a course of dealing, evidence of this may be used to incorporate terms into the contract,122 or to negative the implication of a term which would otherwise be implied.123 In addition, if the course of dealing has the effect of placing a particular meaning on the terms of a document, the parties may be bound by that course of dealing, even if it involves the admission of subsequent
conduct as evidence. The basis may be a variation of the contract — if the contract would not otherwise have the meaning attributed to it — or the existence of estoppel precluding the parties from denying that the contract is to be interpreted in accordance with their course of dealing.124 [12-21] Consideration. In Pao On v Lau Yiu Long,125 Lord Scarman, when delivering the advice of the Privy Council, expressed the law as follows:126 There is no doubt … that extrinsic evidence is admissible to prove the real consideration where (a) no consideration, or a nominal consideration, is expressed in the instrument, or (b) the expressed consideration is in general terms or ambiguously stated, or (c) a substantial consideration is stated, but an additional consideration exists. The additional consideration must not, however, be inconsistent with the terms of the written instrument. Extrinsic evidence is also admissible to prove the illegality of the consideration.
[12-22] Identity of parties or their relationship. Extrinsic evidence may be admissible to prove the parties to a contract where the document does not make this matter clear. Frequently, the circumstances surrounding the contract will identify the parties with sufficient precision. But extrinsic evidence may also be admitted if there is ambiguity. For example, in Giliberto v Kenny127 an action for specific performance was brought on an alleged contract for the sale which in one part described the purchaser as ‘Mrs Kenny’ and in another as ‘Mr Kenny’. The relevant document was signed by Mrs Kenny and the High Court held that extrinsic evidence was admissible for the purpose of showing that Mrs Kenny was acting as agent for her husband and herself. There was clearly a case of patent ambiguity and the trial judge was justified in relying on facts known to the parties to the contract. However, according to Shogun Finance Ltd v Hudson128 ‘where [page 273] the party is … specifically identified in the document: oral or other extrinsic evidence is not admissible’ to prove the contrary. Extrinsic evidence may be used to identify the relationship of a party or the capacity in which he or she contracted, at least in cases where the document is unclear.129 For example, extrinsic evidence might be used to explain that a person who appears to be a party to the contract is in fact the agent of a principal on whose behalf the contract was made. [12-23] Rectification. A well-established exception to the parol evidence rule (or more acurately, a situation in which the rule does not apply)130 arises where
rectification of a written document is sought. Extrinsic evidence of the parties’ intention — including direct evidence of intention — is admissible to rectify the document so that it expresses that intention.131 The purpose of rectification is, as Isaacs J explained in Bacchus Marsh Concentrated Milk Co Ltd v Joseph Nathan & Co Ltd,132 not to import additional or different terms into contracts, but, instead, ‘to re-form instruments so as to make them accord with what the parties actually agreed to, or with what one party intended and the other party knew the first intended’. One feature of this exception is unsatisfactory. If a party claims that the document should be rectified the result may be to let in evidence which turns out to be irrelevant because the claim is rejected by the court.133 There is obviously a prolongation of proceedings and an increase in the cost of the litigation. As a practical matter, it may be difficult for the court to disregard the evidence entirely when construing the contract.134 1.
Cf Chatenay v Brazilian Submarine Telegraph Co Ltd [1891] 1 QB 79 at 85 (adopted Life Insurance Co of Australia Ltd v Phillips (1925) 36 CLR 60 at 78).
2.
See generally Elisabeth Peden and J W Carter, ‘Taking Stock: the High Court and Contract Construction’ (2005) 21 JCL 172; J W Carter and Elisabeth Peden, ‘The “Natural Meaning”’ of Contracts’ (2005) 21 JCL 277. For other ‘incidents’ of commercial construction, see [2-24].
3.
(2008) 234 CLR 151 at 160; 242 ALR 47 at 51; [2008] HCA 3 at [18].
4.
Bowes v Shand (1877) 2 App Cas 455 at 462; Francis v Lyon (1907) 4 CLR 1023 at 1040.
5.
Pioneer Shipping Ltd v BTP Tioxide Ltd [1982] AC 724 at 736.
6.
Contrast Thorner v Major [2009] 1 WLR 776 at 794–5, 800–1; [2009] UKHL 18 at [58], [82]–[83].
7.
River Wear Commissioners v Adamson (1877) 2 App Cas 743 at 763.
8.
See David McLauchlan, ‘Common Intention and Contract Interpretation’ [2011] LMCLQ 30.
9.
Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar Hansen-Tangen [1976] 1 WLR 989 at 996. See also Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp (1984) 156 CLR 41 at 62; 55 ALR 417; [1-10], [3-06].
10.
See Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337; 41 ALR 367 at 352–3.
11.
Goldsbrough Mort & Co Ltd v Carter (1914) 19 CLR 429 at 447; Deutsche Genossenschaftsbank v Burnhope [1995] 1 WLR 1580 at 1589. Cf Sir Johan Steyn, ‘Written Contracts: To What Extent May Evidence Control Language?’ [1988] CLP 23.
12.
L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd [1974] AC 235 at 263 per Lord Simon (approving Norton on Deeds, 1906, p 43). See also Bahr v Nicolay (No 2) (1988) 164 CLR 604 at 616–17, 651; 78 ALR 1.
13.
See Pacific Carriers Ltd v BNP Paribas (2004) 218 CLR 451 at 463; 208 ALR 213 at 222. See also [1-12]. On that basis, the approach applies to documents associated with contracts, such as termination notices. See [31-04].
14.
See Law Commission, The Parol Evidence Rule, Law Com No 154, 1986, para 2.4.
15.
See [21-01]–[21-11]. See also [12-23].
16.
See, eg L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd [1974] AC 235.
17.
See, eg TCN Channel 9 Pty Ltd v Hayden Enterprises Pty Ltd (1989) 16 NSWLR 130 at 146.
18.
See Charter Reinsurance Co Ltd v Fagan [1997] AC 313 at 388 (interpretation must conform to the intention of the parties). See further [14-18].
19.
Antaios Compania Naviera SA v Salen Rederierna AB [1985] AC 191 at 201. See also Di Dio Nominees Pty Ltd v Brian Mark Real Estate Pty Ltd [1992] 2 VR 732 at 740; Zhu v Treasurer of New South Wales (2004) 218 CLR 530 at 560; 211 ALR 159 at 180.
20.
The relevant context is now usually termed the ‘factual matrix’. See [12-13]–[12-15].
21.
For example, the approach to the construction of contracts of guarantee is usually said to be ‘stricter’ than the approach to contracts generally. See Corumo Holdings Pty Ltd v C Itoh Ltd (1991) 24 NSWLR 370 at 377. See also Andar Transport Pty Ltd v Brambles Ltd (2004) 217 CLR 424; 206 ALR 387 (indemnities).
22.
See [12-05]–[12-23] (the ‘parol evidence rule’ and its exceptions).
23.
See Chapter 13.
24.
See Chapter 14.
25.
Cf H K Lücke, ‘Contracts in Writing’ (1966) 40 ALJ 265.
26.
(1878) 3 App Cas 552.
27.
(1909) 8 CLR 316 at 323.
28.
(1878) 3 App Cas 552 at 577. Cf Goss v Nugent (1833) 5 B & Ad 58 at 64–5; 110 ER 713 at 716; Bank of Australasia v Palmer [1897] AC 540 at 545.
29.
Working Paper No 70, 1976, para 4. See also Nicolazzo v Harb (2009) 22 VR 220 at 230; [2009] VSCA 79 at [65].
30.
The Parol Evidence Rule, Law Com No 154, 1986. See Geoffrey Marston [1986] CLJ 192; J W Carter, ‘The Parol Evidence Rule: The Law Commission’s Conclusions’ (1988) 1 JCL 33.
31.
See Nicolazzo v Harb (2009) 22 VR 220 at 232; [2009] VSCA 79 at [71].
32.
See [12-07].
33.
See generally on integration [12-08].
34.
See [12-13]–[12-15].
35.
See Amcor Ltd v Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union (2005) 222 CLR 241 at 258, 262; 214 ALR 56 at 67, 70; Koompahtoo Local Aboriginal Land Council v Sanpine Pty Ltd (2007) 233 CLR 115 at 132; 241 ALR 88 at 97; [2007] HCA 61 at [32].
36.
(1909) 8 CLR 316 at 323. See [12-05].
37.
See Andrew Stewart, ‘Oral Promises, Ad Hoc Implication and the Sanctity of Written Agreements’ (1987) 61 ALJ 119.
38.
(1955) 56 SR (NSW) 81.
39.
See [11-22].
40.
See Nicolazzo v Harb (2009) 22 VR 220 at 231; [2009] VSCA 79 at [70]–[71]; Masterton Homes Pty Ltd v Palm Assets Pty Ltd (2009) 261 ALR 382 at 401–2; [2009] NSWCA 234 at [90].
41.
(1955) 56 SR (NSW) 81 at 94 (italics added).
42.
(1986) 7 NSWLR 170 at 191. See also Nemeth v Bayswater Road Pty Ltd [1988] 2 Qd R 406 at 413.
43.
[1976] 2 All ER 930. See also Finucane v New South Wales Egg Corp (1988) 80 ALR 486.
44.
[1976] 2 All ER 930 at 935.
45.
(1937) 59 CLR 348 at 357.
46.
(1856) 6 E & B 370; 119 ER 903.
47.
For the condition precedent concept see [13-18].
48.
Air Great Lakes Pty Ltd v K S Easter (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 309 at 331, 333, 337.
49.
Harnor v Groves (1855) 15 CB 667 at 674; 139 ER 587 at 590 (adopted Gordon v Macgregor (1909) 8 CLR 316 at 319–20, 322–3).
50.
Air Great Lakes Pty Ltd v K S Easter (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 309 at 336; Nemeth v Bayswater Road Pty Ltd [1988] 2 Qd R 406 at 413. Cf Restatement (2d) Contracts (1979), §213. If the intention is for the document to integrate part of the bargain, the focus of the parol evidence rule is consistency with that part of the contract.
51.
Bank of Australasia v Palmer [1897] AC 540 at 545; Hoyt’s Pty Ltd v Spencer (1919) 27 CLR 133 at 144. Cf Restatement (2d) Contracts (1979), §209(1) (‘a writing or writings constituting a final expression of one or more terms of an agreement’).
52.
See Equuscorp Pty Ltd v Glengallan Investments Pty Ltd (2004) 218 CLR 472 at 484; 211 ALR 101 at 109. Cf Parker v South Eastern Railway Co (1877) 2 CPD 416 at 421.
53.
See Hardwick Game Farm v Suffolk Agricultural Poultry Producers Association [1966] 1 WLR 287 at 340 (affirmed sub nom Henry Kendall & Sons v William Lillico & Sons Ltd [1969] 2 AC 31). Cf [10-18].
54.
Gordon v Macgregor (1909) 8 CLR 316 at 320, 323–4; Major v Bretherton (1928) 41 CLR 62 at 67– 8.
55.
[1896] 2 QB 59 at 62. See also Life Insurance Co of Australia Ltd v Phillips (1925) 36 CLR 60 at 71, 76. Cf Nemeth v Bayswater Road Pty Ltd [1988] 2 Qd R 406 at 414.
56.
Bank of Australasia v Palmer [1897] AC 540.
57.
See Elisabeth Peden and J W Carter, ‘Entire Agreement — and Similar — Clauses’ (2006) 22 JCL 1; Catherine Mitchell, ‘Entire Agreement Clauses: Contracting Out of Contextualism’ (2006) 22 JCL 222.
58.
See Inntrepreneur Pub Co (GL) v East Crown Ltd [2000] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 611.
59.
(1937) 59 CLR 348 (see [12-18]). See also L’Estrange v F Graucob Ltd [1934] 2 KB 394 (see [1015]). Contrast Hart v MacDonald (1910) 10 CLR 417 (see [11-11]).
60.
However, an integration clause may be ineffective, for example, as a prohibited exclusion clause or unjust term. See generally [14-22]–[14-25], [19-18]–[19-20], [24-15]–[24-32].
61.
See [12-06].
62.
[2009] 1 AC 1101; [2009] UKHL 38. See Janet O’Sullivan [2009] CLJ 510; David McLauchlan (2010) 126 LQR 8.
63.
See David McLauchlan, ‘Contract Interpretation in the Supreme Court — Easy Case, Hard Law?’ (2010) 16 NZBLQ 229; Andrew Phang, ‘Recent Developments in Singapore Contract Law — the Search for Principle’ (2011) 28 JCL 3.
64.
See art 8(3). See also UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts 2010, art 4.3.
65.
Farmer v Honan (1919) 26 CLR 183 at 195; Life Insurance Co of Australia Ltd v Phillips (1925) 36 CLR 60 at 71; Bahr v Nicolay (No 2) (1988) 164 CLR 604 at 616–17, 651; Byrnes v Kendle (2011) 243 CLR 253 at 273, 284; 279 ALR 212; [2011] HCA 26 at [53], [98].
66.
For discussion see Catherine Mitchell, ‘Contract Interpretation: Pragmatism, Principle and the Prior Negotiations Rule’ (2010) 26 JCL 134; David McLauchlan, ‘Deleted Words, Prior Negotiations and Contract Interpretation’ (2010) 24 NZULR 277; M P Furmston, ‘Current Issues in the Interpretation of Contracts’ (2011) 28 JCL 78.
67.
See, eg Inglis v John Buttery & Co (1878) 3 App Cas 552 at 577; Secured Income Real Estate (Australia) Ltd v St Martin’s Investments Pty Ltd (1979) 144 CLR 596 at 606; 26 ALR 567; Bahr v Nicolay (No 2) (1988) 164 CLR 604 at 617.
68.
[1971] 1 WLR 1381 at 1384.
69.
See Stephen Charles, ‘Interpretation of Ambiguous Contracts by Reference to Subsequent Conduct’ (1991) 4 JCL 16; J Edward Bayley, ‘Prior Negotiations and Subsequent Conduct in Contract Interpretation: Principles and Practical Concerns’ (2011) 28 JCL 179.
70.
See, eg Inglis v John Buttery & Co (1878) 3 App Cas 552 at 572; Maynard v Goode (1926) 37 CLR 529 at 538.
71.
[1919] AC 533. See further [12-18].
72.
(1919) 26 CLR 183 at 197. Cf Thornley v Tilley (1925) 36 CLR 1 at 11.
73.
(1907) 5 CLR 68 at 78. See also Barrier Wharfs Ltd v W Scott Fell & Co Ltd (1908) 5 CLR 647; Lennon v Scarlett & Co (1921) 29 CLR 499; Terrex Resources NL v Magnet Petroleum Pty Ltd [1988] 1 WAR 144 at 160; Darter Pty Ltd v Malloy [1993] 2 Qd R 615 at 619 and [5-05].
74.
(2008) 238 CLR 570 at 582; 251 ALR 322 at 330; [2008] HCA 57 at [35]. See also Franklins Pty Ltd v Metcash Trading Ltd (2009) 76 NSWLR 603 at 615, 625, 630, 680; 264 ALR 15; [2009] NSWCA 407 at [11], [58], [90], [314]–[317].
75.
[1974] AC 235 at 261. See also [12-18].
76.
[1970] AC 583.
77.
See further [12-18], [12-19].
78.
See also [12-16].
79.
See Byrnes v Kendle (2011) 243 CLR 253 at 285–6; 279 ALR 212; [2011] HCA 26 at [101]; and see generally [7-01]–[7-23], [31-08]–[31-10].
80.
See Sir Anthony Mason, ‘Opening Address’ (2009) 25 JCL 1; David McLauchlan, ‘Plain Meaning and Commercial Construction: Has Australia Adopted the ICS Principles?’ (2009) 25 JCL 7.
81.
[1976] 1 WLR 989 at 997.
82.
See Chapter 2 and David McLauchlan, ‘Contract Interpretation: What is it About?’ (2009) 31 Syd LR 5.
83.
(1982) 149 CLR 337. See further [12-19]. See also DTR Nominees Pty Ltd v Mona Homes Pty Ltd (1978) 138 CLR 423 at 429; 19 ALR 223; Bahr v Nicolay (No 2) (1988) 164 CLR 604 at 616, 651; Forsikringsaktieselskapet Vesta v Butcher [1989] AC 852 at 909.
84.
(1982) 149 CLR 337 at 350. Stephen and Wilson JJ agreed.
85.
(1919) 26 CLR 410 at 427.
86.
See Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust v South Sydney City Council (2002) 240 CLR 45; 186 ALR 289; [2002] HCA 5 (see J W Carter and Andrew Stewart (2002) 18 JCL 182); Byrnes v Kendle (2011) 243 CLR 253 at 285; 279 ALR 212; [2011] HCA 26 at [99]. Cf Maggbury Pty Ltd v Hafele Australia Pty Ltd (2001) 210 CLR 181 at 188; 185 ALR 152 at 155.
87.
See Trawl Industries of Australia Pty Ltd v Effem Foods Pty Ltd Trading as ‘Uncle Bens of Australia’ (1992) 27 NSWLR 326 at 358–9.
88.
See Byrnes v Kendle (2011) 243 CLR 253 at 285; 279 ALR 212; [2011] HCA 26 at [99]; Western Export Services Inc v Jireh International Pty Ltd (2011) 282 ALR 604; [2011] HCA 45. Cf Pacific Carriers Ltd v BNP Paribas (2004) 218 CLR 451 at 462; 208 ALR 213 at 221; [2004] HCA 35 at [22].
89.
[1976] 1 WLR 989 at 995.
90.
See further on the scope of the concept Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society [1998] 1 WLR 896 at 912–13 (as explained Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA v Ali [2002] 1 AC 251 at 269). See also Sir Christopher Staughton, ‘How Do Courts Interpret Commercial Contracts?’ [1999] CLJ 303 at 307.
91.
(1916) 22 CLR 307.
92.
(1982) 149 CLR 337. See further [12-19].
93.
[1976] 1 WLR 989.
94.
(1955) 56 SR (NSW) 81 (see [12-07]).
95.
Cf Pao On v Lau Yiu Long [1980] AC 614 at 631.
96.
But see Johnson Matthey Ltd v A C Rochester Overseas Corp (1990) 23 NSWLR 190 at 195–6 (not followed in Whittet v State Bank of New South Wales (1991) 24 NSWLR 146 at 153).
97.
Bank of New Zealand v Simpson [1900] AC 182; R W Cameron & Co v L Slutzkin Pty Ltd (1923) 32 CLR 81.
98.
(1943) 67 CLR 266.
99.
[1910] 1 Ch 777.
100. (1937) 59 CLR 348. 101. (1929) 43 CLR 310 at 327. See also Campbell v Kitchen & Sons Ltd (1910) 12 CLR 515 at 527. Cf Horton v Jones (1934) 34 SR (NSW) 359 at 364 (affirmed (1935) 53 CLR 475). 102. [1919] AC 533 at 540. 103. [1974] AC 235 (see J H Baker [1973] CLJ 196). 104. See [13-03], [13-07]. 105. See [1974] AC 235 at 268–9. 106. The need for reconciliation arises from the approval of Schuler in Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337. 107. The subsequent conduct of the parties may create an estoppel (precluding a party from relying on a particular legal effect) or amount to a variation of the contract. Cf Australian Energy Ltd v Lennard Oil NL [1986] 2 Qd R 216 at 237. 108. If the conduct is by one party only, the evidence cannot be regarded as admissible except as evidence of an estoppel. Cf Burns Philp Hardware Ltd v Howard Chia Pty Ltd (1987) 8 NSWLR 642 at 645–6, 657. 109. See [12-13]. 110. See [11-12]–[11-16]. 111. [1896] 2 QB 59. See also Criss v Alexander (1928) 28 SR (NSW) 297. 112. See [11-20]. 113. [1983] QB 54. 114. (1982) 149 CLR 337 (see [11-10], [12-13]).
115. (1982) 149 CLR 337 at 354. 116. (1982) 149 CLR 337 at 353–4. See also [11-10]. 117. For English decisions which may support the reception of evidence of the subsequent conduct for the purpose of implication on this basis see Ferguson v John Dawson & Partners (Contractors) Ltd [1976] 3 All ER 817; Wilson v Maynard Shipbuilding Consultants AB [1978] QB 665. Cf Mears v Safecar Security Ltd [1983] QB 54. 118. (1952) 85 CLR 1 (see also [10-12]). 119. See [11-25]. 120. Thornley v Tilley (1925) 36 CLR 1; Royal Insurance Australia Ltd v Government Insurance Office of NSW [1994] 1 VR 123 at 133. 121. See, eg Palgrave Brown & Son Ltd v Owners of SS Turid [1922] 1 AC 397. 122. See [10-18]. 123. See Gemmell Power Farming Co Ltd v Nies (1935) 35 SR (NSW) 469 at 476. 124. Amalgamated Investment & Property Co Ltd v Texas Commerce International Bank Ltd [1982] QB 84 at 121. Cf Grundt v Great Boulder Pty Gold Mines Ltd (1937) 59 CLR 641 at 657, 674. 125. [1980] AC 614. 126. [1980] AC 614 at 631. See also Barba v Gas & Fuel Corp of Victoria (1976) 136 CLR 120 at 131–2; 12 ALR 649; Yarooma Beach Development Co Pty Ltd v Coeur de Lion Investments Pty Ltd (1989) 18 NSWLR 398 at 407. 127. (1983) 48 ALR 620. 128. [2004] 1 AC 919 at 943–4 per Lord Hobhouse. Lord Walker agreed. See also [2004] 1 AC 919 at 973. 129. See Mallinson v Scottish Australian Investment Co Ltd (1920) 28 CLR 66 at 75. 130. See Chartbrook Ltd v Persimmon Homes Ltd [2009] 1 AC 1101 at 1121; [2009] UKHL 38 at [42]. 131. See, eg NSW Medical Defence Union Ltd v Transport Industries Insurance Co Ltd (1986) 6 NSWLR 740; Ryledar Pty Ltd v Euphoric Pty Ltd (2007) 69 NSWLR 603 at 657; [2007] NSWCA 65 at [269]. 132. (1919) 26 CLR 410 at 427. See generally on rectification [21-01]–[21-11]. 133. See Prenn v Simmonds [1971] 1 WLR 1381 at 1383; B & B Constructions (Aust) Pty Ltd v Brian A Cheeseman & Associates Pty Ltd (1994) 35 NSWLR 227 at 232–3. 134. But see Watson v Phipps (1985) 63 ALR 321 at 323.
[page 274]
Chapter 13
Classification of Terms [13-01] Purpose of classification.1 One purpose of classifying contractual terms, which has already been referred to, is to distinguish express terms from implied terms.2 Terms may also be classified from the point of view of whether they survive termination, and a distinction drawn between substantive terms and procedural terms. Another purpose of classification is to see whether the term is capable of being breached. A distinction is then drawn between promises and contractual undertakings on the one hand, and non-promissory terms, such as definitional terms, factual statements and terms providing for contingencies, on the other.3 For example, in Kleinwort Benson Ltd v Malaysia Mining Corp Berhad4 a ‘comfort letter’ stated that it was the ‘policy’ of Malaysia Mining to ensure that its subsidiary, to whom money had been lent by Kleinwort, ‘is at all times in a position to meet its liabilities’ to Kleinwort. When the subsidiary defaulted Kleinwort sought payment from Malaysia Mining. Kleinwort relied on the comfort letter, contending that the statement of policy was a promissory obligation to ensure that the subsidiary would repay its loan. The English Court of Appeal held that the statement was not intended to be promissory and could not be breached. Accordingly, Malaysia Mining was not liable when it changed its policy and refused to meet the subsidiary’s liabilities. In deciding whether the promisee is entitled to terminate the performance of the contract,5 or can merely claim damages, a ‘tripartite classification’ of terms has been adopted.6
The Tripartite Classification [13-02] Basis of classification. Under the tripartite classification the issue is whether a term is a condition, a warranty or an intermediate term. Classification
must be made on the basis of the intention of the parties. It is therefore an issue of construction.7 The tripartite classification was adopted [page 275] by the High Court in Koompahtoo Local Aboriginal Land Council v Sanpine Pty Ltd.8 In relation to implied terms, the construction issue is usually predetermined by statute, at least as a matter of presumption.9
Conditions and Warranties [13-03] Conditions as important terms. A promisee who establishes that the promisor has breached a condition is both entitled to terminate the performance of the contract and to claim damages for its breach.10 Because a breach of a condition gives rise to a right to terminate the performance of the contract, a condition is a particularly important contractual term.11 [13-04] Definition of condition in sale of goods. The distinction between conditions and warranties figures prominently in the sale of goods legislation. There is no express definition of the word ‘condition’. Nevertheless, the term is inferentially defined by s 16(2) of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW)12 as a term any breach of which13 ‘may give rise to a claim for damages’ and to a ‘right to reject the goods and treat the contract as repudiated’. This reference to treating the contract as repudiated is a reference to termination by the buyer for the seller’s breach of condition. The definition of condition stated in the sale of goods legislation is of general application.14 However, in Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd v Luna Park (NSW) Ltd15 Jordan CJ distinguished two types of conditions, namely, those requiring ‘strict’ compliance and those requiring ‘substantial’ compliance. The first type of condition corresponds to that defined by the sale of goods legislation. The second differs from the first because only a ‘substantial’ breach will give rise to a right to terminate. In view of the subsequent emergence of the intermediate term concept16 this refinement in classification is probably now unnecessary.17 The fact that any breach of a term classified as a condition gives rise to a right to terminate implies that the right may accrue even though the
[page 276] promisor’s breach does not cause any loss or damage to the promisee.18 Although this legitimises the classification of a term which provides a contractual right to terminate for any breach as a ‘condition’,19 it is misleading to treat the existence of a contractual right to terminate for breach as on a par with breach of condition.20 [13-05] Definition of warranty in sale of goods. Section 5(1) of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW) states:21 ‘Warranty’ means an agreement with reference to goods which are the subject of a contract of sale, but collateral to the main purpose of such contract, the breach of which gives rise to a claim for damages, but not to a right to reject the goods and treat the contract as repudiated.
Under this definition there is no right to terminate for breach of warranty, and the contrast between condition and warranty is therefore established. Although the Act’s concept of a warranty,22 as a term the breach of which gives rise to a right to claim damages but not to a right to terminate, has been applied generally (and not restricted to sale of goods contracts),23 in modern commercial contracts the word ‘warranty’ is frequently used as a general description of the parties’ express undertakings.24 [13-06] Weaknesses of the distinction. The definitions stated above might give the impression that the words ‘condition’ and ‘warranty’ now have settled meanings and that the distinction between them is clear. However, this is not the case, and one weakness of the distinction is that the words are used in other senses as well.25 The major weakness of the distinction is its simplistic nature, that is, the idea that all terms are so straightforward that they can be classified as either important (conditions) or unimportant (warranties). This neglects the obvious fact that some terms are ambivalent in that they may be important in some situations but unimportant in others.26 The distinction is simplistic for another reason as well, namely, the conception of a contractual term as creating a single obligation. In fact, contractual terms are often composite, creating a number of obligations.27 In practice, therefore, the distinction (between conditions and warranties) must be applied to each obligation contained in a contractual term rather than to the term as a whole.28 [page 277]
A final weakness of the distinction is its inflexibility. Because a term must be classified at the moment of formation, on the basis of construction, no regard can be had to any actual breach; at best the court can consider possible breaches.29 The distinction therefore places a court in a rather restricted position and encourages the treatment of terms as conditions. For example, assume that a court is construing a term in a standard form contract for the sale of goods. If it can foresee that some breaches of the term might have serious consequences, the court is virtually obliged, in any choice between condition and warranty, to choose the former, irrespective of how minor the breach before the court actually is, because of the possibility of prejudice to a party to a subsequent contract on the same form. Until recently this encouraged the avoidance of contracts on the ground of a technical breach for the purpose of taking advantage of a change in market price for the subject matter of the contract. [13-07] Other meanings. ‘Condition’ and ‘warranty’ have a number of meanings and are frequently used in senses different from those described above.30 First, the word ‘condition’ is sometimes used as a synonym for ‘term’.31 It then describes any term of the contract, whatever its nature.32 This is the case, for example, in the expression ‘conditions of sale’. Second, the word ‘condition’ may also describe a contingency, that is, an event which is not certain to occur but which must occur before performance under a contract becomes due. For example, if A’s obligation to perform under a contract with B is dependent on the issue of a licence to export goods by a certain date, the issue of the licence is the ‘condition’ (contingency) which must be satisfied if A is to come under an obligation to perform.33 Of course, the fulfilment of the contingency may also be promised.34 Three other meanings of the word ‘warranty’ may be noted: to describe any contractually binding promise, whatever its nature,35 as where a contract states that each party gives certain (enumerated) ‘warranties’ to the other; to describe the executory undertaking or promise in a collateral contract;36 or [page 278] to describe an essential contractual promise,37 although it is now rare for the word to be used in this sense outside the context of insurance.38
Intermediate Terms [13-08] The Hongkong Fir case. In Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd39 the English Court of Appeal interpreted a seaworthiness term in a time charterparty. This stated that the vessel was ‘in every way fitted for ordinary cargo service’. Upjohn LJ said40 that the term was not a condition and that the remedies open to the charterers, on breach by the shipowners, depended ‘entirely upon the nature of the breach and its foreseeable consequences’. Diplock LJ explained the position in the following way:41 No doubt there are many simple contractual undertakings, sometimes express but more often because of their very simplicity … to be implied, of which it can be predicated that every breach of such an undertaking must give rise to an event which will deprive the party not in default of substantially the whole benefit which it was intended that he should obtain from the contract. And such a stipulation, unless the parties have agreed that breach of it shall not entitle the non-defaulting party to treat the contract as repudiated, is a ‘condition’. So too there may be other simple contractual obligations of which it can be predicated that no breach can give rise to an event which will deprive the party not in default of substantially the whole benefit which it was intended that he should obtain from the contract; and such a stipulation, unless the parties have agreed that breach of it shall entitle the nondefaulting party to treat the contract as repudiated, is a ‘warranty’. There are, however, many contractual undertakings of a more complex character which cannot be categorised as being ‘conditions’ or ‘warranties’ … Of such undertakings all that can be predicated is that some breaches will and others will not give rise to an event which will deprive the party not in default of substantially the whole benefit which it was intended that he should obtain from the contract; and the legal consequences of a breach of such an undertaking, unless provided for expressly in the contract, depend upon the nature of the event to which the breach gives rise and do not follow automatically from a prior classification of the undertaking as a ‘condition’ or a ‘warranty’.
Thus, the seaworthiness undertaking was too ‘complex’ in nature to be classified as either a condition or a warranty. All that could be said was that some breaches would be serious (for example, a breach causing the vessel to sink) and others only minor (for example, one making repair work of a single day’s duration necessary).42 [page 279] There is a difference between the approach of Upjohn LJ and that of Diplock LJ. The latter treated the case as one in which the condition or warranty classification simply failed to come up with an answer. Upjohn LJ, on the other hand, appears to have been of the view that the term was a warranty, and he implicitly rejected the proposition that there can be no termination for breach of warranty.43
[13-09] Definition. Although there is no express reference to a category of ‘intermediate’ terms in Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd,44 subsequent decisions have treated it as having given birth to such a category.45 As a matter of definition, an intermediate term is one the importance of which lies somewhere between a condition and a warranty. A term can only be so classified after it has been found, on the basis of construction, to be neither a condition nor a warranty.46 The breach of such a term gives rise to a right to claim damages, but only if the consequences are sufficiently serious does a right to terminate arise. Intermediate terms have also been described as ‘innominate’ terms.47 The rationale for this terminology is that the character of the term in question cannot be judged by construction, so that it takes on the ‘character’48 of a condition or a warranty in accordance with the seriousness of the actual breach established. By and large the two expressions have been treated as interchangeable.49 However, since most of the terms in this third category are so construed because they are capable of being breached in various ways50 it seems better to acknowledge their intermediate status than to imply that they cannot be classified at all.
Scope of the Classification [13-10] General application. The tripartite classification is of general application, in the sense that it is not restricted to particular kinds of contracts or terms.51 The classification is applicable to both express and implied terms. All that is necessary for the term to be the subject of the classification is the capability of breach.52 Thus, it applies equally to [page 280] undertakings as to the truth of a present (or past) fact and to promises that things will happen in the future. Generally, however, the courts have not applied it to ‘time stipulations’, that is, terms which state the time for performance.53 Of course, it is always open to the parties to a contract to classify a term by express provision, but this is use of the classification, not its avoidance.
[13-11] Conventional descriptions of terms. Primarily because of the variety of meanings attributed to the word ‘warranty’, the conventional description of a term as a warranty may not be an accurate expression of its place in the tripartite classification. For example, the ‘warranty of seaworthiness’ found, expressly or impliedly, in charterparties is not strictly a warranty, it is an intermediate term unless the parties have expressly provided to the contrary.54 By way of contrast, one (at least) of the ‘warranties’ implied by the common law into contracts for work and materials55 — that requiring the contractor to supply materials fit for the other party’s purpose — must, as a matter of construction, usually be a condition.56 [13-12] Terms providing for contingencies. An important type of contractual term which does not fall within the tripartite classification is that which merely provides for a contingency.57 For example, if A agrees to pay B $1000 if fire destroys B’s motor car before 1 March, that part of the term which qualifies A’s promise to pay is not governed by the tripartite classification and it is not appropriate to ask whether destruction by fire before 1 March is important to the parties. The position is simply that A cannot be called upon to perform unless a fire takes place and destroys B’s vehicle before 1 March.58 [13-13] Sale of goods law.59 In Cehave NV v Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH (The Hansa Nord)60 the English Court of Appeal applied the analysis made in Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd61 to a contract for the sale of goods. Although the judgments in the case exhibit differences of approach to the issue, the unifying feature was that s 61(2) of the Sale of Goods Act 1893 (UK),62 which preserved the ‘rules of the common law’ permitted recourse to decisions prior to the passing of the Act. It was important for the court to find some such provision because the sale of goods legislation codified the prior law on the subject.63 [page 281] There is no Australian case in which The Hansa Nord has been applied, and the application of that case in Australia is, to some extent at least, uncertain. However, the utility of the Hongkong Fir case must outweigh the technical arguments which can be made against its application to a sale of goods contract. Alternatively, the sale of goods legislation should be amended, as has occurred in New South Wales.64
[13-14] Effect of statute. We have already seen that where a term is implied by statute the legislation will generally provide a classification, in terms of either a condition or a warranty. This is the case, for example, with the sale of goods legislation.65 In theory this is a prima facie classification only since the legislation permits the parties to reach agreement for some other classification. Thus, s 57 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW)66 provides that where ‘any right, duty, or liability would arise under a contract of sale by implication of law, it may be negatived or varied by express agreement, or by the course of dealing between the parties, or by usage, if the usage be such as to bind both parties to the contract’. For example, the implied condition requiring goods the subject of the sale to be of merchantable quality may be reduced to the status of a warranty by a term which makes it clear that the buyer is to have no right to reject the goods for a breach in relation to quality.67 In practice, the ability to alter the nature of terms implied by statute is frequently restricted to contracts between commercial enterprises. For example, in respect of ‘consumer’ sales, as defined by s 62 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW), a provision which purports to ‘exclude or restrict the operation’ of ss 18, 19 or 20 (except s 19(4)) ‘or any liability of the seller for a breach of a condition or warranty implied by any provision of those sections is void’.68 [13-15] Criticism. The analysis in Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd,69 from which the tripartite classification is derived, should be accepted as an accurate analysis of the law, and a useful reminder that the existence of a right to terminate the performance of a contract does not always depend on the breach of a term classified as a condition. However, the preference for a tripartite, rather than bipartite, classification can be criticised. [page 282] It is doubtful whether the decision in the Hongkong Fir case necessitated the creation of a third category of intermediate terms. Upjohn LJ seems to have considered that a serious breach of warranty would give rise to a right to terminate.70 Although it might be argued that the definition of ‘warranty’ in the sale of goods legislation71 precludes this, Ormrod LJ in Cehave NV v Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH (The Hansa Nord)72 thought that, even in the sale of goods context, termination for breach of warranty could be based on a de facto failure of consideration, rather than the existence of a third type of term.
Moreover, the concept of the intermediate term has had the effect of making it virtually impossible to conclude that a term was intended by the parties to be a mere warranty and this class of express terms is, for practical purposes, virtually closed. Some, at least, of the terms which have in the past been construed as warranties73 must be regarded as ripe for reclassification as intermediate terms.
Promises and Contingencies [13-16] Distinguishing promises from contingencies. A term which expresses a promise that an event will occur (or will not occur) or an undertaking as to the truth of a present (or past) fact is treated as embodying a contractual obligation, the breach of which gives rise to a claim for damages.74 Such a term is distinguishable from one which qualifies the obligation of a party by providing for a contingency.75 For example, if a contract for the sale of goods provides that the obligation of the parties to perform is subject to the issue of an export licence, but neither party undertakes to obtain the licence, the issue of a licence is merely a contingency on which the obligation of the parties to perform depends.76 The obvious distinction between a term stating an undertaking and a term which merely provides for a contingency is that the latter does not provide a basis for a damages claim if the contingency is not fulfilled. [13-17] Promises which state contingencies. A term may embody both a promise and a contingency. For example, if a sale of goods contract between A and B not only makes A’s obligation to perform dependent on the issue of the licence, but also contains a promise by B to obtain the export licence by a specific date, the condition (contingency) is of a promissory kind because B has promised to see that it is fulfilled. Therefore, if B fails to obtain the licence by the specified date, not only is B unable to enforce A’s obligations, but B is also liable in damages for breach of contract. The former consequence arises from the contingent nature of [page 283] A’s obligation, the latter consequence from the fact that B has promised to fulfil the contingency. The tripartite classification then becomes applicable and the
question may arise whether the obligation to obtain the licence by the specified date is a condition in the sense of ‘essential promise’. If it is, A is entitled to terminate the performance of the contract.77 [13-18] Conditions precedent and subsequent. Where the occurrence of an event is a condition precedent, the existence of the contract, or the obligation of one party (or both parties) to perform is subject to the prior occurrence of a specified event. Whether the failure of the event to occur means that there is no contract, or simply no obligation to perform, depends on the intention of the parties.78 For example, in George v Roach79 an agreement for the sale of a business provided that a newspaper agency should be purchased at the value placed on it by a named valuer. The person named refused to value the agency and a majority of the High Court held that valuation by the person named was a ‘condition precedent’ to the existence of a contract between the parties and that the refusal to value meant that there was no contract. In the same way the parties to a contract may express an intention that a particular event is to terminate the obligation of the parties to perform, or a relation created by the contract, or to give either (or both) of the parties the right to terminate the further performance of the contract. The occurrence of the event referred to is then a condition subsequent.80 For example, the parties to a sale of goods contract might provide that neither is obliged to perform if an export licence is not obtained by a specified date. The occurrence of the event — failure to obtain the licence by the specified date — terminates the obligation of the parties to perform.81 Because the distinction affected the onus of proof, the distinction between conditions precedent and conditions subsequent was more significant in times when precise pleading was important. The onus of proving the fulfilment of a condition precedent rests on the plaintiff in the action whereas the defendant bears the onus of proving that a condition subsequent has occurred.82 Now that the fulfilment of conditions precedent is the subject of an implied averment83 the distinction is not particularly important. In any event, the utility of the distinction is doubtful, because the terms ‘precedent’ and ‘subsequent’ merely express contrasting time relations. In fact, the difference between conditions precedent and conditions subsequent is largely semantic84 for the simple reason that [page 284]
whether the ‘condition’ is ‘precedent’ or ‘subsequent’ depends on the perspective of the individual. Thus, a provision which is termed a ‘condition precedent’ may operate as a condition subsequent.85 In Perri v Coolangatta Investments Pty Ltd86 Gibbs CJ explained that the crucial issue is always the effect of the ‘condition’ because, ‘provided the effect of a condition is clearly understood its classification may be merely a matter of words’. Thus, it is important to distinguish events which must occur for the formation of a binding contract from events which merely condition a party’s obligation to perform. Where there is no contract until the event in question occurs either party may resile prior to the occurrence of the event without being held liable in damages for breach of contract. And it is not open to one party to overlook (‘waive’) the non-occurrence of the event and to claim a right to enforce the ‘contract’. The ‘condition’ must be for that party’s benefit alone and that is more likely to be the position where the event conditions the obligation of one party to perform.87 By contrast, where the event merely makes a party’s obligation to perform contingent, neither party is entitled to withdraw from the contract until it is clear that the event will not occur, in the case of a condition precedent, or the event has actually occurred, in the case of a condition subsequent. [13-19] Confusion between promise and contingency.88 It is usual to refer to conditions precedent and subsequent as terms of the contract,89 and this, unfortunately, leads to some confusion between promises and contingencies. Although it is reasonable to refer to a term classified as a condition (in the sense of essential promise) as a ‘condition precedent’, it is not necessary for a condition precedent to be stated in a contractual term. For example, the phrase ‘subject to approval by X’ may operate to indicate the existence of a condition precedent to the formation of a contract.90 It is difficult to say that this type of condition precedent is a term when there is no contract until the event occurs. More accurately the statement describes the event (the approval by X) which must occur before a contract is formed. Confusion between promises and contingencies is present in the sale of goods legislation. For example, s 31 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW) provides91 that, unless the parties have agreed to the contrary, ‘delivery of the goods and payment of the price are concurrent conditions, that is to say, the seller must be ready and willing to give possession of the goods to [page 285]
the buyer in exchange for the price, and the buyer must be ready and willing to pay the price in exchange for possession of the goods’. Having regard to the definition of ‘condition’ referred to earlier,92 it might be thought that the failure of the buyer to be ready and willing to pay the price is a breach which gives rise to a right to terminate. However, that is not usually the case. The purpose of s 31 is to state that the seller’s obligation to deliver is contingent on the buyer’s readiness and willingness to pay the price. It expresses a presumption of concurrent performance, and makes the readiness and willingness of the buyer a condition precedent to the obligation of the seller to deliver.93 The fact that the buyer impliedly promises to be ready and willing means that an absence of readiness or willingness on the buyer’s part at the time appointed for acceptance (and payment) constitutes a breach of contract. But the seriousness of the breach depends, in the first instance, on a classification of the term rather than the operation of s 31.94
Other Types of Terms [13-20] Essential and fundamental terms. So far as the right to terminate is concerned, a term cannot be more essential or fundamental than a condition. It is more common to refer to time stipulations which are conditions as ‘essential’ terms95 but this is merely an illustration of preferred terminology. However, it is sometimes suggested that conditions must be distinguished from essential or fundamental terms in the construction of contractual right to terminate,96 and the application of exclusion clauses.97 [13-21] Definitional terms. Some contractual terms do no more than define the meaning of words appearing in the contract. For example, a term might provide that ‘month’ means ‘calendar month’. Obviously, these terms do not embody promises. [13-22] Exclusion clauses. An important category of contractual terms, referred to collectively in this work as ‘exclusion clauses’, operate to exclude, restrict or qualify the rights of the parties. They are also referred to as ‘exemption’ clauses or ‘exception’ clauses. These do not usually embody contractual undertakings. The rules governing the construction of exclusion clauses are discussed later.98 [13-23] Procedural terms. Some contractual terms lay down procedures to be
followed in defined situations. For example, a contract may contain [page 286] an arbitration clause which applies in the event of a dispute between the parties. Such a clause specifies the procedure for the resolution of disputes. Only where a procedural term embodies a contractual undertaking is it meaningful to speak of the term being breached. For example, an arbitration clause is capable of being breached.99 [13-24] Agreed damages clauses. Agreed damages clauses, which purport to quantify the damages which are to be payable in the event of breach, are distinguishable from those so far considered because they deal with the secondary obligation of a party after breach, rather than a primary obligation.100 Agreed damages terms are governed by a distinction between liquidated damages clauses and penalties.101 The term is not enforceable if it is a penalty. 1.
See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, Chapter 4.
2.
See [10-01].
3.
See, eg McTier v Haupt [1992] 1 VR 653.
4.
[1989] 1 WLR 379. See also Commonwealth Bank of Australia v TLI Management Pty Ltd [1990] VR 510. Contrast Banque Brussels Lambert SA v Australian National Industries Ltd (1989) 21 NSWLR 502 (see Alan Tyree (1990) 2 JCL 279).
5.
For the meaning of ‘termination’ see [28-40], [32-01].
6.
See [13-02]–[13-28].
7.
Friedlander v Bank of Australasia (1909) 8 CLR 85 at 99; Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711.
8.
(2007) 233 CLR 115; 241 ALR 88; [2007] HCA 61. See J W Carter, ‘Commercial Construction and Contract Doctrine’ (2009) 25 JCL 83.
9.
See further [13-14].
10.
See, eg Lombard North Central Plc v Butterworth [1987] 1 QB 527 at 535. See further [35-02].
11.
Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd (1938) 61 CLR 286; Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711.
12.
See also ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 16(2); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 16(2); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 14(2); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 11(2); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 16(2); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 16(2); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 11(2).
13.
Subject to the de minimis rule: Cehave NV v Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH (The Hansa Nord) [1976] QB 44 at 69.
14.
L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd [1974] AC 235.
15.
(1938) 38 SR (NSW) 632 at 641–2 (reversed on other grounds sub nom Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd (1938) 61 CLR 286).
16.
See [13-08]–[13-15].
17.
See [30-11]; but cf Citicorp Australia Ltd v Hendry (1985) 4 NSWLR 1 at 27.
18.
See [30-11].
19.
See, eg Afovos Shipping Co SA v Pagnan [1983] 1 WLR 195 at 203.
20.
See [30-35], [36-15], [37-29].
21.
See also ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 5(1); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 5(1); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 3(1); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 60(1); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 3(1); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 3(1); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 60(1).
22.
The idea that breach of warranty does not give rise to a right to terminate is historically inaccurate and based on a misinterpretation of Lord Abinger CB’s famous statement in Chanter v Hopkins (1838) 4 M & W 399 at 404; 150 ER 1484 at 1486–7. See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, §§4-14–4-15.
23.
See Associated Newspapers Ltd v Bancks (1951) 83 CLR 322 at 339.
24.
See further [13-07], [13-11].
25.
See further [13-07].
26.
See further [13-08], [13-09].
27.
See, eg Associated Newspapers Ltd v Bancks (1951) 83 CLR 322.
28.
Cf [30-49].
29.
See [30-13].
30.
See Total Gas Marketing Ltd v Arco British Ltd [1998] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 209 at 218 (source of recurring confusion).
31.
For a more detailed treatment see S J Stoljar, ‘The Contractual Concept of Condition’ (1953) 69 LQR 485.
32.
Cf Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd v L Schuler AG [1972] 1 WLR 840 at 850 (affirmed sub nom L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd [1974] AC 235).
33.
See further [13-16], [28-05]–[28-10]; [28-36]–[28-38].
34.
See [13-17].
35.
See Oscar Chess Ltd v Williams [1957] 1 WLR 370 at 374.
36.
See, eg Gardiner v Grigg (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 524 at 531.
37.
Marine Insurance Act 1909 (Cth), s 39(1). See also Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Compagnie d’Assurances Maritimes Aeriennes et Terrestres [1996] 1 VR 561 at 567–8.
38.
See Deaves v CML Fire and General Insurance Co Ltd (1979) 143 CLR 24 at 63; 23 ALR 539; EuroDiam Ltd v Bathurst [1990] 1 QB 1 at 40.
39.
[1962] 2 QB 26. See M P Furmston (1962) 25 MLR 584.
40.
[1962] 2 QB 26 at 64.
41.
[1962] 2 QB 26 at 69–70 (italics supplied).
42.
For the position in the Hongkong Fir case see [30-58].
43.
See further [13-15].
44.
[1962] 2 QB 26. The catchwords to the headnote refer to ‘intermediate stipulation’.
45.
See, eg Cehave NV v Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH (The Hansa Nord) [1976] QB 44 at 60.
46.
Bunge Corp v Tradax Export SA [1980] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 294 at 309 (affirmed sub nom Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711).
47.
See, eg Antaios Compania Naviera SA v Salen Rederierna AB [1985] AC 191 at 200.
48.
Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711 at 719.
49.
See Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH v Vanden Avenne-Izegem PVBA [1978] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 109 at 113.
50.
See [30-17], [30-22].
51.
See Ankar Pty Ltd v National Westminster Finance (Australia) Ltd (1987) 162 CLR 549; 70 ALR 641 (see J W Carter and J C Phillips, ‘Construction of Contracts of Guarantee and the Hongkong Fir Case’ (1988) 1 JCL 70). But see [13-13].
52.
For illustrations of non-promissory terms which are not subject to the distinction see [13-21], [13-22], [13-24].
53.
See further [30-52].
54.
Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd [1962] 2 QB 26. See also Kodros Shipping Corp of Monrovia v Empresa Cubana de Fletes (The Evia (No 2)) [1983] 1 AC 736 at 765 (‘safe port warranty’).
55.
See [11-14].
56.
However, the terms implied under statute into consumer transactions are generally ‘warranties’. See [11-24].
57.
See further [13-16], [28-37].
58.
See, eg Tricontinental Corp Ltd v HDFI Ltd (1990) 21 NSWLR 689 (entitlement to make demand under underpinning agreement).
59.
See J W Carter and C Hodgekiss, ‘Conditions and Warranties: Forebears and Descendants’ (1977) 8 Syd LR 31.
60.
[1976] QB 44 (see F M B Reynolds (1976) 92 LQR 17).
61.
[1962] 2 QB 26.
62.
See now Sale of Goods Act 1979 (UK), s 62(2). For equivalent provisions see ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 62(1); NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 4(2); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 4(2); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 61(2); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 59(2); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 5(2); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 4(2); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 59(2).
63.
The decision was approved by the House of Lords in Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar HansenTangen [1976] 1 WLR 989 (see [12-15]). See also Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711 (see [30-52]).
64.
Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW), s 4(5). See further [13-15].
65.
See, eg [11-18].
66.
See also NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 57; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 56; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 54; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 59; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 61; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 54.
67.
Cf Robert A Munro & Co Ltd v Meyer [1930] 2 KB 312 (see [31-11]).
68.
Section 64(1). See further [14-22]–[14-25].
69.
[1962] 2 QB 26.
70.
See [13-08]. See also Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati [1957] 2 QB 401 at 431.
71.
See [13-05].
72.
[1976] QB 44 at 84.
73.
See, eg Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati [1957] 2 QB 401 (term in charterparty requiring vessel to be loaded prior to expiry of lay days).
74.
For the assessment of damages see Chapter 35.
75.
See also [13-12].
76.
See also [13-07] and further [13-17], [28-07].
77.
Hence the expression ‘promissory condition’: see, eg Tricontinental Corp Ltd v HDFI Ltd (1990) 21 NSWLR 689 at 702–3. Cf Ankar Pty Ltd v National Westminster Finance (Australia) Ltd (1987) 162 CLR 549 at 555–6. See further [13-19].
78.
See Chapter 5.
79.
(1942) 67 CLR 253. Contrast Booker Industries Pty Ltd v Wilson Parking (Qld) Pty Ltd (1982) 149 CLR 600; 43 ALR 68.
80.
See, eg National Australia Bank Ltd v KDS Construction Services Pty Ltd (1987) 163 CLR 668; 76 ALR 27.
81.
However, where such an event may occur as the result of a breach of contract the courts are reluctant to treat its occurrence as of itself terminating the obligation of the parties to perform, as this might allow a party to profit by his or her own wrong. See [31-01].
82.
See, eg Verna Trading Pty Ltd v New India Assurance Co Ltd [1991] 1 VR 129.
83.
See [28-11].
84.
Meehan v Jones (1982) 149 CLR 571 at 582; 42 ALR 463. But see DW McMorland, ‘A New Approach to Precedent and Subsequent Conditions’ (1980) 4 Otago LR 469.
85.
See Total Gas Marketing Ltd v Arco British Ltd [1998] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 209 (see B J Davenport (1999) 115 LQR 11).
86.
(1982) 149 CLR 537 at 541; 41 ALR 441. Cf Holmes, The Common Law, ed by M De W Howe, 1963, p 247.
87.
Contrast Balbosa v Ali [1990] 1 WLR 914 at 919.
88.
See G H Treitel, ‘“Conditions” and “Conditions Precedent”’ (1990) 106 LQR 185; J W Carter, ‘Conditions and Conditions Precedent’ (1991) 4 JCL 90.
89.
The usage goes back at least as far as Boone v Eyre (1777) 1 H Bl 273n; 126 ER 160.
90.
See generally [5-03].
91.
For the corresponding provisions see [28-08].
92.
See [13-04].
93.
For the concept of readiness and willingness to perform see [30-29].
94.
See [30-19], [30-51].
95.
See generally [30-50]–[30-53].
96.
See [13-04] and further [36-15]. See also [30-35] (anticipatory breach).
97.
See [14-08].
98.
See Chapter 14.
99.
Doleman & Sons v Ossett Corp [1912] 3 KB 257. On when a right to terminate may be based on breach of a procedural term see [30-19].
100. For the distinction between primary and secondary obligations see [32-05], [35-01], [36-14]. 101. See [37-07]–[37-17].
[page 287]
Chapter 14
Exclusion Clauses [14-01] Types of exclusion clauses.1 Exclusion clauses are of three main types. These may be illustrated and distinguished by consideration of the effect of an exclusion clause on a party’s right to terminate the performance of a contract for breach of contract.2 The first type operates to exclude the rights which a party would otherwise possess under a contract by reason of the other terms of the contract, or a rule or presumption of law. For example, a clause may exclude the right to terminate for breach of a particular term of the contract, thus obliging the promisee to perform notwithstanding the breach of that term. The second type restricts the rights of one party without necessarily excluding the liability of the other party. For example, the clause might provide that only a particular type of breach is to give rise to the right of termination. The third type qualifies rights by subjecting them to specified procedures. For example, a promisee’s right to terminate may be subject to a requirement of a written notice of exercise given within seven days. The principles stated in the paragraphs which follow are applicable to each type of clause. Thus, in Darlington Futures Ltd v Delco Australia Pty Ltd3 the High Court decided that a clause which restricts or partially excludes the liability of a party by limiting it to a specific sum is governed by the same rules as a total exclusion. The principles have also sometimes been applied to other types of terms, on the basis that they are analogous to exclusion clauses.4 Nevertheless, for a clause to be exclusionary it must operate for the benefit of one party only. For example, in Suisse Atlantique Société d’Armement Maritime SA v NV Rotterdamsche Kolen Centrale5 a liquidated damages clause6 quantifying the liability of charterers for detention of the vessel was not exclusionary because it operated, potentially, for the benefit of both parties. It provided for the payment of $1000 per day even if the shipowners suffered a lesser loss by reason of the charterers’ breach of contract.
[page 288] [14-02] Function of exclusion clauses.7 Traditionally, exclusion clauses have been treated as having the function of providing defences to possible actions for breach of contract.8 Two consequences of this approach may be noticed at this stage: it implies that exclusion clauses are applied after liability under the contract (or in tort) has been established; and it means that even if the clause excludes all liability there is still, in theory at least, a breach of contract on the part of the promisor.9 The second function of exclusion clauses is to define contractual duties and obligations.10 The contrast is illustrated by Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd.11 Securicor agreed to provide a night patrol service at Photo Production’s factory under a standard form contract, cl 1 of which provided that under ‘no circumstances’ would Securicor be ‘responsible for any injurious act or default by any employee … unless such act or default could have been foreseen and avoided by the exercise of due diligence’ on its part. The same term went on to provide that Securicor would not ‘in any event’ be ‘responsible for’ any loss suffered by Photo Production through ‘fire or any other cause, except in so far as such loss is solely attributable to the negligence’ of an employee of Securicor ‘acting within the course’ of his or her employment. Photo Production claimed damages from Securicor for the loss suffered when an employee of Securicor, who had satisfactory references and had been employed for over three months, set fire to the premises. Apparently, the fire had been started deliberately, but not necessarily with the intention of causing serious damage. But the fire got out of control and substantial damage occurred. Lord Wilberforce adopted the traditional approach. He found a breach by Securicor in its failure to comply with an implied term requiring it to provide the service with due and proper regard to the safety and security of Photo Production’s premises. However, as a matter of construction Securicor’s liability for this breach had been excluded by cl 1 of the contract. Lords Salmon, Keith and Scarman agreed with this approach. On the other hand, Lord Diplock saw cl 1 as defining Securicor’s obligations. In the absence of the exclusion clause, he said the primary obligations of Securicor would have included an implied ‘absolute obligation to procure that the visits by the night patrol to the factory were conducted by natural persons
who would exercise reasonable skill and care for the safety of the factory’. However, Lord Diplock explained:12 That primary obligation is modified by the exclusion clause. Securicor’s obligation to do this is not to be absolute, but is limited to exercising due
[page 289] diligence in its capacity as employer of the natural persons by whom the visits are conducted, to procure that those persons shall exercise reasonable skill and care for the safety of the factory.
On this analysis, the effect of the exclusion clause was to prevent the events which had occurred constituting a breach of contract on the defendants’ part. Accordingly the plaintiffs’ action failed. The precise function of any exclusion clause must depend on the construction of the contract. Most exclusion clauses could be treated as definitions. However, the influence of the traditional approach is such that the courts generally prefer to treat them as possible defences.
Operation at Common Law [14-03] Question of construction. The application of exclusion clauses at common law depends on the intention of the parties. It is therefore a question of construction.13 This may be described as the ‘primary’ rule. There are, however, particular (‘secondary’) rules which assist in the application of the primary rule in cases where the clause does not expressly deal with the circumstances which have occurred. Often these rules are no more than particular applications, or adaptations, of general approaches to construction, employed for the purpose of inferring the parties’ intention. Although traditionally the courts’ approach to exclusion clauses has been hostile, the recent cases illustrate a more balanced approach.14 This has become possible because of the statutory protection of contracting parties in weak bargaining positions.15 Indeed, in the context of commercial contracts the better view is that exclusion clauses are to be treated in the same way as other types of contractual provision. Thus, in Darlington Futures Ltd v Delco Australia Pty Ltd16 the High Court said:17 [T]he interpretation of an exclusion clause is to be determined by construing the clause according to its natural and ordinary meaning, read in the light of the contract as a whole, thereby giving due weight to
the context in which the clause appears including the nature and object of the contract, and, where appropriate, construing the clause contra proferentem in case of ambiguity.
Accordingly, the secondary rules considered below are, generally, no more than rules of thumb. Indeed, it may be that some of the rules are no longer useful, even as rules of thumb. [14-04] Construction contra proferentem. An exclusion clause is ‘ordinarily construed strictly against the proferens’,18 that is, against the [page 290] party who drafted (and is relying on) the clause. For example, in Wallis v Pratt19 a term in a contract for the sale of goods provided: ‘Sellers give no warranty expressed or implied as to growth, description or any other matters.’ The contract required the delivery of seed described as ‘common English sainfoin’ but the sellers delivered, and the buyers accepted, different goods, namely, ‘giant sainfoin’. The seed delivered was inferior to that provided for by the contract and the buyers claimed damages for breach of the condition implied by s 13 of the Sale of Goods Act 1893 (UK),20 which required the goods to correspond with their contractual description. The sellers relied on the quoted clause. The House of Lords held that the clause only covered a breach of warranty and did not apply to the breach of condition which had occurred. The fact that the effect of s 11 of the Sale of Goods Act 1893 (UK)21 was to reduce the buyer’s rights to those applicable for breach of warranty — because the goods had been accepted — did not affect the matter. The term breached retained its character as a condition: only the rights of the buyers had been changed. [14-05] Application of the contra proferentem rule. The contra proferentem rule is a general rule of construction and therefore applies to any ambiguous clause, exclusionary or otherwise. Nevertheless, two points need to be noted. First, although the rule is only relevant in cases of ambiguity in construction, in the context of exclusion clauses the courts have tended to create ambiguity artificially, by a process of strict construction. For example, in Ernest Beck & Co v K Szymanowski & Co22 a contract to sell a quantity of ‘200 yards reels’ of cotton thread provided ‘the goods delivered shall be deemed to be in all respects in accordance with the contract’ unless within 14 days notice was received by the seller ‘of any matter or thing by reason whereof … the goods are not in accordance with the contract’. The buyer discovered that the reels had less than
200 yards of cotton, but failed to complain within the 14-day period. The House of Lords held that the clause did not apply because it was restricted to goods delivered, whereas the buyer’s complaint was in relation to goods not delivered. The decision was possible only because of the very strict interpretation of the clause. It is by no means clear that the result in Beck v Szymanowski would be the same today.23 The clause was not ambiguous on its face, and there seems no compelling reason to create an ambiguity by strict construction. The proper approach, as expressed by the High Court in Darlington Futures Ltd v Delco Australia Pty Ltd24 is to construe the clause in accordance with ordinary construction principles, and only if ambiguity is then found should the contra proferentem rule be applied. [page 291] Second, as Darlington also makes clear,25 suggestions in Ailsa Craig Fishing Co Ltd v Malvern Fishing Co Ltd26 that rules such as the contra proferentem rule should not be vigorously applied to clauses which merely limit liability, are not relevant in Australia where the various types of exclusion are all subject to the same rules.27 [14-06] Seriousness of breach. Commonsense tells us that the more serious the breach of contract the less likely it is for the parties to the contract to have intended an exclusion clause to apply. Although the cases support such a statement,28 much confusion has arisen from attempts to describe in advance the type of breach which will not be covered by an exclusion clause. For example, use has been made of concepts of ‘fundamental’ and ‘total’ breach.29 However, it is the ‘degree of seriousness’30 which counts, not whether a particular epithet is applicable to the breach. Although it is necessary to consider the more particular descriptions, the cases should now be seen as illustrating the straightforward proposition that the more serious the breach sought to be covered, the less likely that the parties intended liability to be excluded. Thus, the recent cases apply a construction presumption to the effect that the parties to a contract do not intend to qualify a right or remedy otherwise implied by law. Clear words are necessary to achieve that result.31 [14-07] Fundamental breach.32 In Suisse Atlantique Société d’Armement Maritime SA v NV Rotterdamsche Kolen Centrale33 the House of Lords
approved ‘a rule of construction’ stated by Pearson LJ in UGS Finance Ltd v National Mortgage Bank of Greece and National Bank of Greece SA34 that ‘normally an exception or exclusion clause or similar provision in a contract should be construed as not applying to a situation created by a fundamental breach of contract’. But, as Pearson LJ pointed out: ‘This is not an independent rule of law imposed by the court on the parties willy-nilly in disregard of their contractual intention.’ [page 292] When approving this principle, the judges in Suisse Atlantique were concerned to disapprove statements in earlier cases35 that, as a matter of law, exclusion clauses never apply to fundamental breach. Similar disapproval had already been expressed by the High Court in Sydney Corp v West.36 Subsequently, the English courts developed a second version of the fundamental breach rule, originally based on termination for fundamental breach,37 but ultimately indistinguishable from the first version. However, in Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd38 the House of Lords rejected this formulation of the rule.39 It remains to consider what the courts mean by ‘fundamental’ breach. At the lowest it describes any breach which provides (or would apart from the exclusion clause provide) the promisee with a right to terminate the performance of the contract.40 At the highest it describes a total non-performance of the contract.41 Somewhere between these conceptions is the idea that a breach is fundamental if it satisfies the requirements applied under the doctrine based on Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd.42 However, for the reasons stated above,43 and the confusion which the fundamental breach concept has created, it is doubtful whether the concept has any real utility. In fact, the rule of construction approved in Suisse Atlantique is hardly ever referred to now. [14-08] Breach of fundamental term.44 In Smeaton Hanscomb & Co Ltd v Sassoon I Setty Son & Co (No 1)45 Devlin J stated that it is a ‘principle of construction’ that exclusion clauses do not apply ‘if the beneficiary has committed a breach of a fundamental term of the contract’. Thus, in cases such as Hain SS Co Ltd v Tate and Lyle Ltd,46 where deviation by a vessel carrying goods from the agreed route is treated as the breach of a fundamental term,
exclusion clauses have been held not to apply. What, then, is a fundamental term? Devlin J said in Smeaton Hanscomb that a fundamental term is something ‘narrower than a condition’, and gave as an example of the breach of such a term the supply of pine logs under a contract for the sale of goods requiring the delivery of mahogany logs. If it is helpful to consider whether the term breached is fundamental, such a term may be implied, it need not be expressly stated in the contract. In fact, most fundamental terms are implied terms. [page 293] In Suisse Atlantique Société d’Armement Maritime SA v NV Rotterdamsche Kolen Centrale47 the House of Lords made it clear that there is no rule of law preventing the application of exclusion clauses to the breach of a fundamental term.48 Moreover, if, as Devlin J suggested in Smeaton Hanscomb, a fundamental term is more important than a condition, breach of the former brings into play the rule of construction applicable on fundamental breach,49 since the breach of a fundamental term is clearly a ‘fundamental’ breach.50 [14-09] Wilful breach. If an exclusion clause does not expressly exclude liability for wilful breach it will usually be construed as not applying to such a breach, on the basis that this may legitimately be presumed to have been the intention of the parties. Conversely, an exclusion clause may restrict the defendant’s responsibility to cases of ‘wilful’ default or breach.51 In Sze Hai Tong Bank Ltd v Rambler Cycle Co Ltd,52 English sellers agreed to sell a quantity of bicycle parts to buyers in Singapore. The goods were sent by sea and a bill of lading was issued acknowledging that the goods were to be delivered in Singapore. It contained an exclusion clause stating that the ‘responsibility of the carrier, whether as carrier or as custodian or bailee of the goods shall be deemed … to cease absolutely after they are discharged’ from the ship. On arrival of the goods in Singapore the buyers, who wished to obtain the goods without paying for them, obtained a letter of indemnity from the Sze Hai Tong Bank Ltd in favour of the shippers. This was presented to the shipping company’s agents. A delivery order was then issued and the goods delivered to the buyers even though they did not present the bill of lading as they should have done. In an action by the sellers against the bank, it was conceded that the bank’s liability depended on whether the shipping company was liable for delivering the
goods without any bill of lading being presented. Although the shipping company sought to rely on the exclusion clause, the Privy Council held that it did not apply. Lord Denning, delivering the advice of the Board, said53 that the clause had to be ‘modified so as not to permit the shipping company deliberately to disregard its obligations as to delivery’. The decision in Sze Hai Tong must be seen as based on the construction of the clause, rather than a rule of law. Thus, in Kamil Export (Aust) Pty Ltd v NPL (Australia) Pty Ltd54 the appellate division of the Supreme Court of Victoria read down an exclusion, on the basis of the presumed intention of [page 294] the parties, so as not to apply to a loss resulting from a deliberate conversion of goods. The conversion occurred when there was a release of the goods to their consignee without the shipper’s consent, and as in Sze Hai Tong Bank Ltd v Rambler Cycle Co Ltd, the bill of lading was not produced. [14-10] Total breach. The concept of ‘total’ breach was applied by the House of Lords in W & S Pollock & Co v Macrae55 where a contract for the building and installation of a set of motor engines provided that all goods were supplied on the basis that the builders were not liable for ‘direct or consequential damages arising from defective material or workmanship’. In an action by the builders for the balance due under the contract the buyers claimed the return of money paid, and compensation for the engines not being in accordance with the contract. Lord Dunedin said56 that the exclusion clause had no application to ‘damage arising when there has been a total breach of contract by failing to supply the article truly contracted for’. On the facts he said that there was ‘such a congeries of defects as to destroy the workable character of the machine’57 and that this amounted to a total breach. The other members of the House of Lords concurred. The total breach concept is difficult to distinguish from fundamental breach. Indeed, they have sometimes been treated as the same thing,58 and there is some evidence of the English courts applying the total breach concept as a rule of law, without proper regard to the construction of the contract.59 However, like fundamental breach, it is clear that it is a rule of construction only.60 [14-11] Supply of a different article. The cases provide many illustrations, mostly fictional, of situations where a supplier of goods is unable to hide behind
an exclusion clause because of supply of an article different from that contracted for. Thus, if the contract requires the supply of cheese the supplier cannot rely on an exclusion clause as protection from the consequences of a supply of chalk.61 In Suisse Atlantique Société d’Armement Maritime SA v NV Rotterdamsche Kolen Centrale62 Lord Wilberforce said that since contracting parties can ‘hardly be supposed to contemplate such a mis-performance, or to have provided against it without destroying the whole contractual substratum, there is no difficulty’ in holding exclusion clauses to be inapplicable to such cases. However, as he was at pains to point out,63 a breach which is serious enough to entitle the promisee to refuse to perform the contract, in this context to refuse to accept the different article, ‘may be reduced in effect, or made not a breach at all, by the terms of the [exclusion] clause’. [page 295] It will also have been noticed that supply of a different article has been used to illustrate other rules, such as the total breach rule,64 which is itself a guide to the dangers involved in treating the supply of a different article as any more than an indication that the exclusion is not, as a matter of construction, likely to apply.65 It may be, however, that the presumption is stronger in the case of the supply of a different article, particularly if the breach is wilful. [14-12] The rule in Flight v Booth.66 Where a contract for the sale of land is entered into it may contain an ‘errors or misdescriptions clause’ to which the rule in Flight v Booth67 applies. In that case the clause provided that if by mistake the land was improperly described, this was not to vitiate the sale. Rather, compensation was to be paid. There was found to be a misdescription in the property sold, and the court stated the following principle:68 [W]here the misdescription, although not proceeding from fraud, is in a material and substantial point, so far affecting the subject-matter of the contract that it may reasonably be supposed that, but for such misdescription, the purchaser might never have entered into the contract at all, in such case … the purchaser is not bound to resort to the clause of compensation. Under such a state of facts, the purchaser may be considered as not having purchased the thing which was really the subject of the sale …
On the facts there was such a discrepancy as to entitle the purchaser to terminate the performance of the contract: the exclusionary clause did not apply to restrict the purchaser to the recovery of ‘compensation’ under the clause. This rule is, in essence, a form of the fundamental breach rule. Theoretically,
like all the others considered, it is a rule of construction. However, it is in practice applied unless the parties have in the clearest words excluded its operation.69 Attempts are sometimes made to give the rule an application, beyond sale of land contracts to contracts generally, or to other types of exclusion clauses.70 This should be discouraged because of the accepted practice peculiar to real estate. [14-13] The main purpose rule. What is usually described as the ‘main purpose’ rule has two aspects. One aspect was expressed by Lord Halsbury LC in Glynn v Margetson & Co:71 ‘Looking at the whole of the instrument, and seeing what one must regard … as its main purpose, one must reject words, indeed whole provisions, if they are inconsistent with what one assumes to be the main purpose of the contract’. He explained the main purpose of the contract before the court as being the delivery of [page 296] perishable goods pursuant to a contract for carriage by sea. Although there was a clause in the contract permitting the carrier to ‘proceed to and stay’ at a series of ports ‘for the purpose of delivering coals, cargo, or passengers or for any other purpose whatsoever’, this had to be construed in the light of the main purpose of the contract. The carriage provided for was between Malaga and Liverpool and the cargo was found to be damaged owing to the delay involved in the vessel travelling 350 miles from Malaga to Burriana on the east coast of Spain before retracing her course. Had the vessel not deviated the cargo would have arrived in good condition, and so the contract was construed as if there was no liberty to deviate except to call at a port (or ports) in the course of the agreed voyage. In the result, the carrier could not invoke the clause. The second form of the main purpose rule is indistinguishable from the fundamental breach rule. If the breach by the promisor is so serious that application of the exclusion clause to the breach would defeat the main purpose of the contract, the court will presume that the parties did not intend the exclusion clause to apply. The continued existence of the main purpose rule as a rule of construction has been acknowledged,72 and courts have not usually interpreted literally an exclusion which would destroy contractual intent. Thus, it might be considered illusory to say ‘I promise to do X’, if the agreement totally excludes any liability
for a failure to do X.73 However, it is doubtful whether there is a rule of law even in this context.74 Moreover, it is now clear that even as a rule of construction it is not as wide as originally conceived. For example, in Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd75 Lord Diplock restricted the main purpose rule to clauses which would deprive the parties’ agreement of the ‘legal characteristics of a contract’. More recently, in Nissho Iwai Australia Ltd v Malaysian International Shipping Corp Berhad76 the High Court held that an exclusion clause may apply to an event defeating the main object of the contract. It was also said that if the happening of the event covered by the clause will always defeat the main object of the contract, the clause will apply. [14-14] The deviation cases.77 A carrier of goods by sea who deviates from the agreed voyage thereby loses the benefit of exclusion clauses in the contract which would otherwise apply.78 The rule is also applicable to other [page 297] contracts of carriage79 by land or rail. It may, indeed, apply to all bailment contracts.80 The basis for the rule is a matter of debate. In Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd81 Lord Wilberforce, referring to the cases on carriage by sea, suggested two possibilities: either the deviation rule is one of construction or the cases on which it is based ‘should be considered as a body of authority sui generis with special rules derived from historical and commercial reasons’.82 The preferable view is that the deviation rule is based on the construction of the contract. Therefore, whether an exclusion clause applies after deviation must depend on its scope: there is no rule of law prohibiting application of the clause.83 Moreover, since deviation usually arises on the breach of a fundamental term, the construction basis brings these cases into line with other rules. This is supported, at least in contexts other than carriage by sea, by the decision of the High Court in Thomas National Transport (Melbourne) Pty Ltd v May & Baker (Australia) Pty Ltd.84 The plaintiff claimed damages as compensation for damage to their goods while in the possession of Thomas National Transport (the carrier), which had agreed to carry the goods and to deliver them to consignees located interstate. The driver of the vehicle carrying the goods back to the carrier’s central depot stored them overnight in his garage where they were damaged by fire. This was a deviation from the usual
arrangements, made necessary because the carrier’s depot was closed for the night, but nevertheless held to be a breach of contract. The terms of the contract provided that the ‘consignors’, that is the plaintiff, had to accept ‘responsibility for any damage or loss of any goods’ while in the carrier’s custody; and that ‘no responsibility’ was accepted by the carrier ‘for any loss of, or damage to’ the goods ‘either in transit or in storage for any reason whatsoever’. Nevertheless, a majority of the High Court held that the provision did not exclude liability for the damage which had occurred after the breach by deviation. [14-15] The four corners rule. What is frequently referred to as the ‘four corners’ rule has been stated in various ways but probably that most [page 298] often quoted is Scrutton LJ’s formulation in Gibaud v Great Eastern Railway Co:85 The principle is well known … that if you undertake to do a thing in a certain way, or to keep a thing in a certain place, with certain conditions protecting it, and have broken the contract by not doing the thing contracted for in the way contracted for, or not keeping the article in the place in which you have contracted to keep it, you cannot rely on the conditions which were only intended to protect you if you carried out the contract in the way in which you had contracted to do it.
Therefore, a contractor who breaches the contract by stepping outside the ‘four corners’ of the contract will generally lose the protection of the exclusion clause. This has its main, indeed almost exclusive application, in the context of bailment contracts. In Sydney Corp v West86 the High Court held that the rule is one of construction. The plaintiff parked his car in the defendant’s car park, and received a ticket which stated that the ticket had to be presented before the vehicle was taken from the car park. In addition, there were terms excluding the liability of the defendants, for, among other things, the ‘loss or damage to any vehicle … however such loss [or damage] may arise or be caused’. The evidence indicated that the defendant delivered the vehicle to a third party without any authorisation by the plaintiff, and notwithstanding the third party’s inability to produce a parking ticket. In fact, a ‘duplicate’ was issued to the third party. A majority of the High Court held that the defendant was unable to rely on the clause excluding liability. Barwick CJ and Taylor J said that the clause had no application where the defendant, as bailee, had been negligent and dealt with the plaintiff’s goods in a way which was neither authorised nor permitted by the contract. Windeyer J said that the contract was breached because the defendant
did not do what it had contracted to do in the way in which it had contracted to do it. It had obtained possession of the vehicle and undertook to release it only on presentation of the ticket, but had in fact released the vehicle without the ticket being produced. The four corners rule is straightforward and simple, perhaps deceptively so as it may be difficult to decide whether an act is authorised by the contract without first bringing the exclusion clause into account to determine what is, in fact, authorised by the contract.87 Nevertheless, as a rule of construction, it is undoubtedly valid.88 [14-16] Negligence. Whether an exclusion clause applies to protect a party from liability for negligence is, of course, a question of construction. However, because negligence frequently results in personal injury or property damage rather than mere economic loss, it is usually said that the intention to exclude liability for negligence must be clearly expressed.89 An [page 299] express reference to negligence is sufficient.90 However, a clause does not expressly exclude negligence unless it actually uses that word or a synonym.91 In cases where there is no express reference to negligence the issue is whether an intention to exclude liability should be imputed to the parties on the basis of the words used. An important consideration is whether the defendant can be held liable in the absence of negligence. If negligence is the only basis for liability that will usually be a sufficient reason for saying that the clause must apply to cases of negligence. For example, in Alderslade v Hendon Laundry Ltd92 the plaintiff left ten handkerchiefs with the defendants for laundering. These were not returned and an action for damages was brought based on the defendants’ negligence. A clause in the contract limited the liability of the defendants to a ‘maximum amount allowed for lost or damaged articles’ equal to ‘20 times the charge made for laundering’. That amount was less than the value of the ten handkerchiefs. The court said that the defendants could not be held liable in the matter of returning the goods except through negligence on their part, and that the clause must therefore have been intended to cover loss of the handkerchiefs through lack of care on their part. A similar approach was taken by the High Court in Davis v Pearce Parking
Station Pty Ltd.93 The plaintiff parked her car at the defendant’s parking station, paid a fee and received a receipt, described as a ‘parking check’. This contained a term stating that the vehicle was garaged ‘at the owner’s risk’, and excluding the defendant’s responsibility ‘for loss or damage of any description’. Due to negligence on the defendant’s part the vehicle was stolen from the station. Eventually it was recovered, but badly damaged. The plaintiff therefore claimed damages for negligence. It was held that the exclusion clause protected the defendant. The court said that although the contract created a bailment relationship, the defendant could exclude its liability for negligence if the words in the contract were clear enough to apply to the circumstances which had occurred. In deciding that the words were sufficiently clear, the court was influenced by the fact that the defendant made a very small charge for the custody of valuable goods. Even though the damage was a result of the defendant’s negligence, a reasonable person in the plaintiff’s position would have treated the clause as indicating that it was necessary to insure the vehicle in order to be protected. However, as Scrutton LJ explained in Rutter v Palmer,94 the rule is not invariable:95 the position is simply that the exclusion clause will ‘more readily’ exclude liability for negligence where that is the only basis of the defendant’s liability. Moreover, it is always appropriate to consider the type [page 300] of clause in issue. For example, in Commissioner for Railways (New South Wales) v Quinn96 a (time limitation) provision dealt with the time within which a claim for loss or damage to goods tendered for conveyance by rail had to be lodged with the Commissioner. Rich J said97 that the term did not have as its object the ‘demarcation of liability’; rather its object was to ‘impose a time bar and a requirement of notice’. [14-17] The Canada SS rules.98 In Canada SS Lines Ltd v The King99 the Privy Council restated the approach to exclusion of liability for negligence in three rules. These are construction rules and should not be treated as if they had statutory force.100 Under the first rule an express exclusion of liability for negligence must be given effect and is sufficient to exclude liability.101 Under the second rule, where there is no express reference to negligence, the court must consider whether the words used are wide enough, with any doubt (or
ambiguity) being resolved contra proferentem.102 Clauses purporting to exclude ‘all liability’ or ‘any loss’ have generally been treated as insufficient to exclude liability for negligence; but the addition of the words ‘whatever its cause’ or ‘howsoever caused’ has been treated as a sufficient indication of an intention to exclude liability for negligence.103 Nevertheless, the use of these (or similar) words is not conclusive,104 and it is arguable that they are not today necessary to achieve protection from liability for negligence. Moreover, as we have seen,105 if the defendant’s duty is such that it cannot be liable in the absence of negligence this is a proper basis for saying that the clause must apply. Thus, in Davis v Pearce Parking Station Pty Ltd106 it was pointed out that, as a bailee, the defendant could not be held liable ‘for loss or damage occurring without negligence’, and the clause was therefore taken to cover such liability. There are nevertheless cases in which an exclusion clause will be held not to apply even though negligence is the only basis for liability. Thus, in Hollier v Rambler Motors (AMC) Ltd107 the plaintiff left his car at the defendant’s premises for repair. When a fire caused damage to his car he claimed damages, relying on the defendant’s negligence. Since the only basis for liability for loss by fire was negligence, the defendant’s argument that a clause stating that the defendant was ‘not responsible for damage caused by fire’ applied looked to be a sound one.108 However, the court said [page 301] that ample content would be given to the clause by treating it as a warning to the plaintiff that the defendant would not be liable in the absence of negligence. The basis for this decision was that an ordinary person in the position of the plaintiff would not have drawn the conclusion that liability was being excluded. Alderslade v Hendon Laundry Ltd109 was distinguished on the basis that in that case an ordinary person would have known that negligence was being excluded. Hollier illustrates the relevance to the construction of the clause of the class of person to whom the clause is addressed: had the contract been a commercial one the result would probably have been different. The third rule stated in the Canada SS case draws on a statement in Alderslade.110 If the words used are wide enough to cover liability for negligence it must be considered whether ‘the head of damage may be based on some ground other than that of negligence’. Therefore, if, as a matter of
construction the words used are wide enough to cover negligence, a court must consider the possible bases for the defendant’s liability before reaching a conclusion on whether in fact liability for negligence has been excluded. However, the other head of damage must ‘not be so fanciful or remote that the proferens cannot be supposed to have desired protection against it’.111 This rule has given rise to considerable controversy. Four points may be made about the rule and the Canada SS rules in general. First, the rule should be taken not too literally. Thus, it is now clear that the Privy Council overstated the position when it said that the existence of a possible head of damage other than negligence is ‘fatal’ to the application of the clause to negligence.112 Second, although the usual case where the third rule applies is where the defendant is subject to a contractual and a tortious duty, the mere fact that a defendant is subject to liability in both tort and contract is not a sufficient basis for concluding that the clause can be avoided simply by suing in tort.113 What is required is for the duties to be of a different nature. For example, in White v John Warwick & Co Ltd114 the plaintiff hired a tradesman’s cycle from the defendant under a contract which obliged the latter to maintain it in working order. When the machine was in need of repair the defendant supplied a replacement. Owing to a defect in the nut which held the saddle in place, the plaintiff suffered injury when the saddle shifted forward and he was thrown to the ground. The plaintiff sued in contract and in tort but the defendant relied on an exclusion of liability ‘for personal injury to the riders of the machines’ as a defence to both claims. The English Court of Appeal held that there were two bases of liability. The contract head of liability was strict in nature, while that in tort depended on [page 302] proof of negligence. The plaintiff conceded that the clause prevented success on the contract claim. The clause did not expressly refer to negligence and it was held not to govern that liability on the basis that sufficient scope was given to the clause by treating it as applicable to the claim in contract. It followed that the clause did not prevent a claim in negligence based on the breach of a duty of care.115 Third, in Australia there is authority for the proposition that the Canada SS rules do not apply where an indemnity clause is relied on as a defence to liability
in contract or tort.116 However, these cases are predicated on the view that ordinary construction principles apply and are therefore difficult to reconcile with Andar Transport Pty Ltd v Brambles Ltd.117 In that case the High Court said that an indemnity clause is subject to a requirement of strict interpretation. Therefore, even if it is correct to say that the Canada SS rules are no longer applicable where an indemnity clause is relied on as a defence to liability in contract or tort, Andar is inconsistent with the view that ordinary construction principles apply.118 Fourth, there is dicta in recent Australian cases that the Canada SS rules are no longer valid. In Schenker & Co (Aust) Pty Ltd v Maplas Equipment and Services Pty Ltd119 the Appeal Division of the Supreme Court of Victoria said that they were in effect rejected by the High Court in Darlington Futures Ltd v Delco Australia Pty Ltd.120 It is, however, doubtful whether this is true. Negligence was not at issue in Delco. There is, moreover, abundant Australian authority for the proposition that an intention to exclude liability for negligence must be clearly expressed.121 [page 303] Since this is all that the Canada SS rules actually require,122 the matter must await a decision by the High Court. [14-18] Reasonableness. Under statute the reasonableness of an exclusion clause may be crucial.123 At common law it is merely a factor to be considered when inferring the intention of the parties as to the scope of the clause. If an exclusion clause operates unreasonably in relation to particular breaches, that is some indication that the parties did not intend the clause to apply to such breaches.124 It has occasionally been suggested that reasonableness has a greater significance at common law. For example, in Gillespie Bros & Co Ltd v Roy Bowles Transport Ltd125 Lord Denning MR said that a refusal to enforce ‘unreasonable’ clauses was the basis for the reluctance of courts to permit the exclusion of liability for negligence. He suggested that a clause is unreasonable if it would be unconscionable to allow the defendant to rely on it. However, in the same case, Buckley LJ expressed the orthodox position as follows:126 It is not … the function of a court … to fashion a contract in such a way as to produce a result which the court considers that it would have been fair or reasonable for the parties to have intended. The
court must attempt to discover what they did in fact intend. In choosing between two or more equally available interpretations of the language used it is of course right that the court should consider which will be likely to produce the more reasonable result, for the parties are more likely to have intended this than a less reasonable result.
More recently, the courts have rejected Lord Denning’s approach.127 For example, although Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd128 indicates that it is relevant to consider the reasonableness of the clause, the case illustrates that in contracts between commercial parties a clause is not likely to be regarded as unreasonable in operation. In fact, the court was impressed by how reasonable the clause in issue was. [14-19] Oral representations and promises. Most cases on the interpretation of exclusion clauses concern attempts to escape liability for breach of contract or negligence. Although such a clause may also apply to [page 304] pre-contractual statements, a party cannot rely on an exclusion clause to escape liability for a fraudulent misrepresentation.129 There are two further points. First, an oral promise or representation may preclude reliance on an exclusion clause in a way which would be inconsistent with the representation. For example, in Mendelssohn v Normand Ltd130 the plaintiff drove into the defendant’s garage and received a ticket from the attendant which purported to exclude liability for loss of the contents of the plaintiff’s vehicle. The plaintiff had valuable jewellery in a suitcase on the back seat of the car and he naturally wished to lock the vehicle. However, the attendant told him that that was not permitted, and said that he would see to it that the vehicle was locked. The suitcase was stolen because the vehicle was not locked and the court held that the defendant could not rely on the exclusion clause because the attendant’s statement had the effect of overriding the exclusion.131 Second, a representation or assurance may not only override an exclusion, but also form the basis for a claim in contract or tort. For example, the assurance in J Evans & Son (Portsmouth) Ltd v Andrea Merzario Ltd,132 as well as overriding the exclusionary provisions of the contract, which would have precluded the plaintiffs claiming damages, provided the basis for the claim. Although there are statements in the English cases133 which suggest that it is immaterial whether the statement relied on as overriding the exclusion clause is a representation, a
promise or part of a collateral contract, it may be important to consider the nature and effect of the statement. If the plaintiff is merely concerned to show that the exclusion clause does not apply, it probably does not matter whether it is in fact a promise or merely a representation: where the plaintiff has relied on the oral statement this will preclude the defendant from invoking the exclusion. However, in cases where the statement forms the basis for the plaintiffs’ action in damages, it may be crucial to analyse the nature of the statement.134 Although a claim for damages in tort or under statute may be made if the statement is a fraudulent (or negligent) misrepresentation,135 or amounts to conduct prohibited by statute,136 no claim for contract damages is available unless the statement is in fact a promise137 supported by consideration.138 This was the position in Evans v Merzario, but will not be so in all cases. [page 305] [14-20] Third parties. By virtue of the privity of contract rule,139 exclusion clauses only protect the parties to the contract. This means that where a party to a contract sues a third party whose negligence has caused loss or damage, the third party will not be permitted to invoke the clause even though it purports to protect the third party. However, in some cases the third party has been able to prove the existence of a promise under which the protection of the exclusion clause is extended beyond the contract in which it is contained.140 Thus, stevedores have been found to have the benefit of exclusion clauses contained in the bill of lading, evidencing a contract between the carrier and the consignee for the carriage of goods, to which the stevedores are not parties.141 [14-21] Termination. The general rule is that termination of the performance of a contract, whether for breach or by frustration, does not of itself prevent reliance on such a clause. The question remains one of intention.142
Operation Under Statute [14-22] Forms of statutory control. One feature of contract law in recent years has been the amount of legislative intervention against exclusion clauses. Some provisions, such as ss 64 and 64A of the Australian Consumer Law, are aimed directly at exclusion clauses.143 Others, such as the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW) are more general, being aimed at ‘unjust’, ‘unconscionable’ or ‘unfair’
contractual terms.144 An exclusion clause will come under this form of control if it is found to be deserving of the description used by the statute. The paragraphs which follow deal in general terms with the impact of such provisions.145 [14-23] Prohibited exclusion clauses. Some statutory provisions prohibit the use of exclusion clauses and make no allowance for ‘reasonable’ operation. For example, s 64 of the Australian Consumer Law prohibits the use of clauses which ‘exclude, restrict or modify’ (or have the effect of excluding, restricting or modifying): the application of all or any of the provisions of the Australian Consumer Law relating to consumer guarantees; the exercise of a right conferred by such a provision; or [page 306] any liability of a person for a failure to comply with a consumer guarantee that applies to a supply of goods or services. Although it will be necessary to construe the contract to see whether the clause in issue excludes, restricts or modifies,146 once this is established it is unnecessary to consider whether or not the parties intended the clause to apply. Assume, for example, that a supplier attempts to limit its liability for the consumer guarantee that goods sold by it are of acceptable quality.147 A consumer who has purchased a washing machine, and who suffers loss as a consequence of the goods not being of acceptable quality will not be limited in a claim for damages by the exclusion clause because s 64 renders it void. [14-24] Permitted use of exclusion clauses. Statutory provisions which prohibit the use of ‘unreasonable’ exclusion clauses impliedly permit the use of exclusion clauses which are not unreasonable. For example, s 64A(1) of the Australian Consumer Law provides that a term in a contract for the supply of goods or services to a consumer is not void under s 64 by reason only of the fact that it limits the liability of the corporation, in any of the ways specified by s 64A. This provision applies to goods or services which are not of a kind ordinarily acquired for personal, domestic or household use or consumption. But even if the goods or services are not of that kind, s64A will not apply if the consumer establishes that it is not ‘fair or reasonable’ for the supplier to rely on the term.148
[14-25] Scope of the legislative provisions. The legislative provisions do not apply to all contracts. For example, the Australian Consumer Law provisions, referred to above,149 are restricted to contracts for the supply of goods or services to a ‘consumer’ (as defined).150 Under the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), the relevant provisions were limited in their application to exclusion clauses relating to terms implied by the Act. Under the Australian Consumer Law, consumers have the benefit of ‘consumer guarantees’, not implied terms.151 In addition, ‘express warranties’ (in relation to goods) take effect as consumer guarantees.152 Therefore, ss 64 and 64A of the Australian Consumer Law also stand guard over ‘express warranties’. By contrast, s 64(1) of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW) renders provisions in a consumer sale void, but only so far as they purport to exclude or restrict the terms implied by the Act, or any liability of the seller for a breach of such a term.153 1.
See generally Yates, Exclusion Clauses in Contracts, 2nd ed, 1982, Chapters 4–6.
2.
See further [31-11].
3.
(1986) 161 CLR 500; 68 ALR 385. See further [14-05].
4.
See, eg Canada SS Lines Ltd v The King [1952] AC 192 (indemnity provision); J Lauritzen AS v Wijsmuller BV (The Super Servant Two) [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 1 at 12 (cancellation clause). But see [14-17].
5.
[1967] 1 AC 361.
6.
See generally on agreed damages clauses [37-07]–[37-17].
7.
See Coote, Exception Clauses, 1964, Chapter 1.
8.
See, eg Owners of SS Istros v F W Dahlstroem & Co [1931] 1 KB 247.
9.
Blue Anchor Line Ltd v Alfred C Toepfer International GmbH (The Union Amsterdam) [1982] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 432 at 436.
10.
Exclusion clauses have been applied in this way in shipping cases. See Jackson v Union Marine Insurance Co Ltd (1874) LR 10 CP 125.
11.
[1980] AC 827 (see Brian Coote, ‘The Second Rise and Fall of Fundamental Breach’ (1981) 55 ALJ 788).
12.
[1980] AC 827 at 851. Earlier (at 847) he said that the defendants had committed a ‘fundamental breach’. Presumably this was directed to the defendants’ position apart from the exclusion clause.
13.
Sydney Corp v West (1965) 114 CLR 481; Darlington Futures Ltd v Delco Australia Pty Ltd (1986) 161 CLR 500.
14.
See, eg Bright v Sampson & Duncan Enterprises Pty Ltd (1985) 1 NSWLR 346 at 365.
15.
See [14-22]–[14-25].
16.
(1986) 161 CLR 500.
17.
(1986) 161 CLR 500 at 510. But cf Bright v Sampson & Duncan Enterprises Pty Ltd (1985) 1
NSWLR 346 at 359. 18.
Thomas National Transport (Melbourne) Pty Ltd v May & Baker (Australia) Pty Ltd (1966) 115 CLR 353 at 376.
19.
[1911] AC 394.
20.
See [11-19].
21.
See [31-15].
22.
[1924] AC 43.
23.
Cf Insight Vacations Pty Ltd v Young (2011) 243 CLR 149 at 154, 162; 276 ALR 497 at 500, 506–7; [2011] HCA 16 at [9], [38].
24.
(1986) 161 CLR 500 at 510 (see [14-03]).
25.
See Sir Anthony Mason, ‘Australian Contract Law’ (1988) 1 JCL 1 at 5.
26.
[1983] 1 WLR 964 at 970. See also George Mitchell (Chesterhall) Ltd v Finney Lock Seeds Ltd [1983] 2 AC 803 at 813–14.
27.
For the interpretation of a clause excluding liability for ‘consequential loss’ see Environmental Systems Pty Ltd v Peerless Holdings Pty Ltd (2008) 19 VR 358; [2008] VSCA 26; J W Carter, ‘Exclusion of Liability for Consequential Loss’ (2009) 25 JCL 118.
28.
See, eg Robert A Munro & Co Ltd v Meyer [1930] 2 KB 312 (see [31-11]); McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission (1951) 84 CLR 377 at 398.
29.
See [14-07], [14-10].
30.
Brian Coote, ‘The Second Rise and Fall of Fundamental Breach’ (1981) 55 ALJ 788 at 801.
31.
See, eg HIH Casualty and General Insurance Ltd v Chase Manhattan Bank [2003] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 61 at 67; Dairy Containers Ltd v Tasman Orient Line CV [2005] 1 WLR 215 at 220.
32.
See, eg Brian Coote, ‘The Rise and Fall of Fundamental Breach’ (1966) 40 ALJ 336. Cf E J Hayek, ‘Exemption Clauses — The Canadian Approach’ (1991) 4 JCL 51.
33.
[1967] 1 AC 361 (see G H Treitel (1966) 29 MLR 546).
34.
[1964] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 446 at 453. See also Thomas National Transport (Melbourne) Pty Ltd v May & Baker (Australia) Pty Ltd (1966) 115 CLR 353 at 377.
35.
See, eg Karsales (Harrow) Ltd v Wallis [1956] 1 WLR 936 at 940.
36.
(1965) 114 CLR 481.
37.
See [32-09].
38.
[1980] AC 827 (see [14-02]).
39.
The decisions in Charterhouse Credit Co Ltd v Tolly [1963] 2 QB 683 and Wathes (Western) Ltd v Austins (Menswear) Ltd [1976] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 14 were overruled.
40.
Suisse Atlantique Société d’Armement Maritime SA v NV Rotterdamsche Kolen Centrale [1967] 1 AC 361 at 397.
41.
Suisse Atlantique Société d’Armement Maritime SA v NV Rotterdamsche Kolen Centrale [1967] 1 AC 361 at 431.
42.
[1962] 2 QB 26 (see [30-58]).
43.
See [14-06].
44.
See, eg Lord Devlin, ‘The Treatment of Breach of Contract’ [1966] CLJ 192. Contrast C D Drake, ‘Fundamentalism in Contract’ (1967) 30 MLR 531.
45.
[1953] 1 WLR 1468 at 1470.
46.
(1936) 41 Com Cas 350; [1936] 2 All ER 597. See further [14-14].
47.
[1967] 1 AC 361. But see Yates, Exclusion Clauses in Contracts, 2nd ed, 1982, pp 196–214.
48.
It was, perhaps, prepared to except cases where the ‘main purpose’ rule applies. But this now seems very doubtful. See [14-13].
49.
See [14-07].
50.
Suisse Atlantique Société d’Armement Maritime SA v NV Rotterdamsche Kolen Centrale [1967] 1 AC 361 at 422.
51.
See, eg Kenyon Son & Craven Ltd v Baxter Hoare & Co Ltd [1971] 1 WLR 519. As to the exclusion of a trustee’s liability for wilful default and ‘gross negligence’ see Armitage v Nurse [1998] Ch 241 (see Nicholas McBride [1998] CLJ 33).
52.
[1959] AC 576.
53.
[1959] AC 576 at 587.
54.
(1993) [1996] 1 VR 538 at 547, 553 (see Brian Coote (1997) 12 JCL 169). See also Suisse Atlantique Société d’Armement Maritime SA v NV Rotterdamsche Kolen Centrale [1967] 1 AC 361.
55.
1922 SC (HL) 192.
56.
1922 SC (HL) 192 at 199.
57.
1922 SC (HL) 192 at 200.
58.
See, eg Farnworth Finance Facilities Ltd v Attryde [1970] 1 WLR 1053.
59.
See Yeoman Credit Ltd v Apps [1962] 2 QB 508 at 520.
60.
See Ailsa Craig Fishing Co Ltd v Malvern Fishing Co Ltd [1983] 1 WLR 964.
61.
UGS Finance Ltd v National Mortgage Bank of Greece and National Bank of Greece SA [1964] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 446 at 453.
62.
[1967] 1 AC 361 at 433.
63.
[1967] 1 AC 361 at 431.
64.
See [14-10].
65.
Cf Wallace-Smith v Thiess Infraco (Swanston) Pty Ltd (2005) 218 ALR 1 at 18.
66.
See Charles Harpum, ‘Exclusion Clauses and Contracts for the Sale of Land’ [1992] CLJ 263 at 270ff.
67.
(1834) 1 Bing NC 370; 131 ER 1160.
68.
(1834) 1 Bing NC 370 at 377; 131 ER 1160 at 1162–3.
69.
See, eg Torr v Harpur (1940) 40 SR (NSW) 585; Jennings v Zilahi-Kiss (1972) 2 SASR 493.
70.
See, eg Yeoman Credit Ltd v Apps [1962] 2 QB 508 at 523.
71.
[1893] AC 351 at 357.
72.
See, eg H & E Van Der Sterren v Cibernetics (Holdings) Pty Ltd (1970) 44 ALJR 157.
73.
See Firestone Tyre and Rubber Co Ltd v Vokins & Co Ltd [1951] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 32 at 39. But see [413], [6-36], [8-11].
74.
But cf MacRobertson Miller Airline Services v Commissioner of State Taxation (WA) (1975) 133 CLR 125; 8 ALR 131; Gregory v MAB Pty Ltd (1989) 1 WAR 1 at 14.
75.
[1980] AC 827 at 850. See also Life Savers (A’asia) Ltd v Frigmobile Pty Ltd [1983] 1 NSWLR 431 at 435–6 (cf S W Cavanagh, ‘The Ultimate Exclusion Clause’ (1985) 59 ALJ 67 at 75–6); Oceanic Sun Line Special Shipping Co Inc v Fay (1988) 165 CLR 197; 79 ALR 9.
76.
(1989) 167 CLR 219; 86 ALR 375.
77.
See John Livermore, ‘Deviation, Deck Cargo and Fundamental Breach’ (1990) 2 JCL 241; Brian Coote, ‘Deviation and the Ordinary Law’ in Rose, ed, Lex Mercatoria: Essays on International Commercial Law in Honour of Francis Reynolds, 2000, p 13.
78.
See, eg Hain SS Co Ltd v Tate and Lyle Ltd (1936) 41 Com Cas 350; [1936] 2 All ER 597.
79.
See London and North Western Railway Co v Neilson [1922] 2 AC 263; Thomas National Transport (Melbourne) Pty Ltd v May & Baker (Australia) Pty Ltd (1966) 115 CLR 353.
80.
See, eg Davies v Collins [1945] 1 All ER 247. Cf Mendelssohn v Normand Ltd [1970] 1 QB 177 at 184.
81.
[1980] AC 827 at 845.
82.
In Hain SS Co Ltd v Tate and Lyle Ltd (1936) 41 Com Cas 350; [1936] 2 All ER 597 the House of Lords seems to have proceeded on the basis that it is ‘termination of the contract’ for breach which prevents the application of exclusion clauses in the deviation cases. Lord Wilberforce’s statement in Photo Production was based on the rationale that the deviation cases cannot be regarded as laying down ‘different rules as to contracts generally’ from those stated in Heyman v Darwins Ltd [1942] AC 356, which excludes the possibility of the deviation cases depending on the fact of termination.
83.
Cf China Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v P S Chellaram & Co Ltd (1990) 28 NSWLR 354 (affirmed (1992) 176 CLR 695); Tasman Express Line Ltd v J I Case (Australia) Pty Ltd (1992) 111 FLR 108 at 111.
84.
(1966) 115 CLR 353.
85.
[1921] 2 KB 426 at 435.
86.
(1965) 114 CLR 481. See also Tozer Kemsley & Millbourn (A’Asia) Pty Ltd v Collier’s Interstate Transport Service Ltd (1956) 94 CLR 384; Walton Stores Ltd v Sydney City Council [1968] 2 NSWR 109.
87.
Cf Ashby v Tolhurst [1937] 2 KB 242.
88.
See Darlington Futures Ltd v Delco Australia Pty Ltd (1986) 161 CLR 500 at 509. See also Glebe Island Terminals Pty Ltd v Continental Seagram Pty Ltd (The Antwerpen) (1993) 40 NSWLR 206. Cf [14-14].
89.
See [14-17].
90.
See, eg J Spurling Ltd v Bradshaw [1956] 1 WLR 461.
91.
See Smith v South Wales Switchgear Co Ltd [1978] 1 All ER 18 at 22, 26 (disapproving Gillespie Bros & Co Ltd v Roy Bowles Transport Ltd [1973] QB 400 at 420, 421). See also E E Caledonia Ltd v Orbit Valve Co Europe [1994] 1 WLR 1515 at 1520 and further [14-17].
92.
[1945] 1 KB 189.
93.
(1954) 91 CLR 642. Cf Davis v Commissioner for Main Roads (1968) 117 CLR 529.
94.
[1922] 2 KB 87 at 92.
95.
See further [14-17].
96.
(1946) 72 CLR 345.
97.
(1946) 72 CLR 345 at 356. See also at 365, 372, 385.
98.
See J W Carter, ‘“Commercial” Construction and the Canada SS Rules’ (1995) 8 JCL 69.
99.
[1952] AC 192 at 208.
100. See, eg Smith v South Wales Switchgear Co Ltd [1978] 1 All ER 18 at 22. 101. See [14-16]. 102. Cf Darlington Futures Ltd v Delco Australia Pty Ltd (1986) 161 CLR 500 at 510 (see [14-03]). 103. See Rutter v Palmer [1922] 2 KB 87 at 94; Commissioner for Railways (New South Wales) v Quinn (1946) 72 CLR 345 at 372; Gillespie Bros & Co Ltd v Roy Bowles Transport Ltd [1973] QB 400. 104. See, eg Smith v South Wales Switchgear Co Ltd [1978] 1 All ER 18. 105. See [14-16]. 106. (1954) 91 CLR 642 at 651 (see [14-16]). 107. [1972] 2 QB 71 (see Brian Coote [1973] CLJ 14). 108. In fact, the court did not consider that the clause had been incorporated into the contract: see [10-18]. 109. [1945] 1 KB 189 (see [14-16]). 110. [1945] 1 KB 189 at 192. 111. See Canada SS Lines Ltd v The King [1952] AC 192 at 208. 112. See Hollier v Rambler Motors (AMC) Ltd [1972] 2 QB 71 at 80. 113. See, eg Bright v Sampson & Duncan Enterprises Pty Ltd (1985) 1 NSWLR 346 at 356–7. 114. [1953] 1 WLR 1285. For illustrations of contracts imposing a strict liability see [29-16]. 115. Because there was no finding of negligence by the trial judge a new trial was ordered. 116. Schenker & Co (Aust) Pty Ltd v Maplas Equipment and Services Pty Ltd [1990] VR 834. See also Pendal Nominees Pty Ltd v Lednez Industries (Australia) Ltd (1996) 40 NSWLR 282 at 289. Contrast E E Caledonia Ltd v Orbit Valve Co Europe [1994] 1 WLR 1515; HIH Casualty and General Insurance Ltd v Chase Manhattan Bank [2003] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 61. 117. (2004) 217 CLR 424. See J W Carter and David Yates, ‘Perspectives on Commercial Construction and the Canada SS Case’ (2004) 20 JCL 233; Wayne Courtney, ‘Construction of Contractual Indemnities — Out with the Old, in with the New?’ (2008) 24 JCL 182. 118. See also Bofinger v Kingsway Group Ltd (2009) 239 CLR 269 at 292; 260 ALR 71 at 84; [2009] HCA 44 at [53]. Cf F & D Normoyl Pty Ltd v Transfield Pty Ltd (t/a Transfield Bouygues Joint Venture) (2005) 63 NSWLR 502. 119. [1990] VR 834 at 846 (see Peter Brereton (1991) 4 JCL 261). See also Glebe Island Terminals Pty Ltd v Continental Seagram Pty Ltd (The Antwerpen) (1993) 40 NSWLR 206 at 242–4. Cf Brown v Petranker (1991) 22 NSWLR 717 at 722. But cf Graham v The Royal National Agricultural and Industrial Association of Queensland [1989] 1 Qd R 624 at 630. 120. (1986) 161 CLR 500. 121. See, eg Commissioner for Railways (New South Wales) v Quinn (1946) 72 CLR 345 at 371; Davis v Pearce Parking Station Pty Ltd (1954) 91 CLR 642 at 649; Davis v Commissioner for Main Roads (1968) 117 CLR 529 at 537; Bright v Sampson & Duncan Enterprises Pty Ltd (1985) 1 NSWLR 346 at 359. 122. Cf Thomas National Transport (Melbourne) Pty Ltd v May & Baker (Australia) Pty Ltd (1966) 115 CLR 353 at 376–7, where Windeyer J (whose judgment was approved in Delco) cited the Canada SS case by way of authority for general principles governing the exclusion of liability for negligence. Cf Davis v Pearce Parking Station Pty Ltd (1954) 91 CLR 642 at 651. 123. See [14-22], [14-24].
124. Cf [12-04]. 125. [1973] QB 400 at 415–17. See also Levison v Patent Steam Carpet Cleaning Co Ltd [1978] QB 69 at 79–80. 126. [1973] QB 400 at 421. See also Bright v Sampson & Duncan Enterprises Pty Ltd (1985) 1 NSWLR 346 at 366. Cf Life Savers (A’asia) Ltd v Frigmobile Pty Ltd [1983] 1 NSWLR 431 at 439. 127. But see M H Ogilvie, ‘Fundamental Breach Excluded but not Extinguished: Hunter Engineering v Syncrude Canada’ (1990) 17 CBLJ 74. 128. [1980] AC 827 (see [14-02]). See also Darlington Futures Ltd v Delco Australia Pty Ltd (1986) 161 CLR 500 at 507–8; Nissho Iwai Australia Ltd v Malaysian International Shipping Corp Berhad (1989) 167 CLR 219. 129. See, eg Jennings v Zilahi-Kiss (1972) 2 SASR 493 at 410. See also [19-19] (misleading and deceptive conduct). 130. [1970] 1 QB 177. 131. This is also an alternative analysis of Curtis v Chemical Cleaning and Dyeing Co [1951] 1 KB 805 (see [10-15]). 132. [1976] 2 All ER 930 (see [12-07]). Cf Couchman v Hill [1947] KB 554 (see [10-08]). 133. See, eg Mendelssohn v Normand Ltd [1970] 1 QB 177 at 186. 134. It is, perhaps, easier to justify rescission; see Walker v Boyle [1982] 1 WLR 495. 135. See generally [18-25]–[18-36]. And see [18-76] (statutory right to damages for innocent misrepresentation). 136. For example, under s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law. See generally Chapter 19. 137. See generally [10-05]–[10-10]. If the statement takes effect as a collateral contract there is the problem of consistency explained in [10-13]. 138. The statement must also be sufficiently definite. See generally [3-08], Chapter 4, [6-37]. 139. See generally Chapter 16. 140. See also Schenker & Co (Aust) Pty Ltd v Maplas Equipment and Services Pty Ltd [1990] VR 834, which illustrates that the same effect may be achieved through indemnity provisions. 141. See [16-24]–[16-27]. 142. See [32-09]. 143. See Carter, Contract and the Australian Consumer Law: A Guide, 2012, Chapter 3. See further [1423]. 144. See generally Chapter 24. 145. For a more detailed treatment see Carter, Carter on Contract, §§ACL-220–ACL-260, 15-220–15250. 146. And note in that regard s 64(2). 147. See [11-30]. 148. Section 64A(3). The matters to be considered are set out in s 64A(4). 149. See [14-24]. 150. See [11-27]. See also Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW), s 64 (consumer sales, as defined by s 62). 151. See [11-26].
152. See [11-31]. 153. The existence of the express condition or warranty does not negative a condition as to merchantable quality implied by the Act: s 64(2).
[page 307]
PART IV
Parties to the Contract
[page 309]
Chapter 15
Capacity [15-01] Introduction. There is a presumption at common law that a person who enters into a contract has full capacity to do so. In certain limited cases a person who has some disability will be exempted fully or partially from the normal rule. Such cases of incapacity are few, and persons alleging that they are protected from the normal consequences of their actions must bear the burden of proving incapacity.1 This chapter is concerned with those limited cases where a contracting party has less than full contractual capacity.
Minors The Age of Majority [15-02] Introduction. By about the 17th century the common law had established 21 as the age at which a person attained adult status for most purposes, such as: having the right to exercise civic responsibilities and to accept civic offices; becoming fully bound by contracts and transfers of property. The selection of any age must necessarily be to some extent an arbitrary process. It would be possible to provide that capacity should depend on the maturity and discretion of each individual, but society requires some general rule for certainty and predictability. [15-03] Lowering the age of majority. In England and Scotland, following the comprehensive report of the Committee on the Age of Majority, the age of majority was, for most purposes, lowered to 18 years in 1969.2 This action was followed by a spate of similar developments in other jurisdictions, the general tendency being to lower the age at which full legal capacity is attained to 18. As
a result of subsequent legislation, the age of majority is now 18 years in all Australian States.3 One incidental result of this reform has been that the word ‘minor’ is now generally used to refer to persons under the age of majority, rather than the term ‘infant’. At [page 310] common law ‘infant’ was used somewhat inappropriately to refer to anyone under the age of 21 years. The effect of this legislation is, of course, that a contracting party aged 18 years or over will, in the absence of special factors such as mental illness or drunkenness, be unable to rely upon lack of contractual capacity as a defence to an action for breach of contract. Although a person does not attain adult status until the age of 18, there are some limited instances where legislation has provided that in respect of particular types of contract a person under that age will be treated as though of full age.4
Contractual Capacity of Minors5 [15-04] Incapacity not absolute. One of the most important instances of contractual incapacity is that arising from minority. The incapacity of minors is regarded as a protection for minors against the consequences of their own actions and presumed lack of discretion and judgment. It was always recognised, however, that the satisfactory protection of minors required that in certain instances their actions should be binding on them. Similar considerations also required that even acts of minors which were not binding on them should not normally be completely devoid of legal effect, because this would mean that while minors were not bound by their contracts, neither could they acquire any enforceable rights under them. Also, minors do not enjoy any general immunity from the operation of statutes of limitation.6 So it was established that the contracts of minors were normally only voidable in the sense that although they were not themselves bound, they could if they chose enforce any resulting rights against an adult party. Also, they could generally render such contracts completely binding by confirming them on turning 18. [15-05] Classification of minors’ contracts. Under the common law the
contracts of minors may be classified into different categories: Although in most cases a minor will not be bound by a contract, they may choose to enforce any resulting rights against an adult party. A contract that is prejudicial to a minor is generally void, and cannot be ratified by the minor.7 In some cases a minor is bound, perhaps in contract but arguably only under restitution principles, because the contract is a ‘contract for necessaries’.8 [page 311] A contract may be considered voidable at the election of the minor, so that the contract will be binding on the minor unless repudiated either during minority or within a reasonable time of attaining majority. Otherwise the minor will be bound.9 Other contracts are not binding on the minor unless ratified on attaining majority. [15-06] The duration of incapacity. The incapacity of minority remains at common law until the minor attains majority and it cannot be removed earlier.10 Similarly, it became established that the courts had no general power to approve and thus render binding a contract or disposition of property into which a minor proposed to enter. Also, a court has no power to consent to a transaction simply because it is beneficial to the minor, though in some cases legislation provides for such a procedure in respect of particular types of transaction.11 More general provisions have now been enacted in some States.12 [15-07] Whether degrees of minority recognised. It has been said that the law recognises no degrees of minority, so that a person who has almost reached the age of majority is just as much a minor as a child of tender years.13 While this is generally true, some qualification is necessary: The acts of a minor who is so young as to be incapable of understanding the nature of his or her actions are totally void rather than, as is generally true of the acts of a minor, merely voidable.14 The age of an individual minor is important in many tort situations.15 The age of a minor is one factor to be considered in deciding whether a particular contract is binding upon the minor as a contract for necessaries.16
[15-08] Minority as a personal privilege. Many statements may be found to the effect that minority is a minor’s personal privilege.17 However, [page 312] it might be better explained by saying that only the minor can elect to repudiate a transaction which is voidable on the ground of minority.18 So, an adult who contracts with a minor will usually be liable in an action brought by the minor to enforce the contract, even though the adult could not have enforced the contract against the minor. There are a few exceptions: Where a minor seeks specific performance minority may be relied on as a defence by a person who has dealt with a minor even though taking advantage of the minority of the plaintiff.19 At common law a person who contracted to purchase land could object to a title which was defective because of a conveyance by a minor at an earlier point in the chain of title.20 A defendant in a tort action for inducing breach of contract can establish as a defence that the person allegedly induced was a minor and therefore was not bound by the contract.21
Contracts for Necessaries [15-09] General concept. Minors may be held liable to pay for necessaries in all jurisdictions except New South Wales. Lord Coke stated:22 an infant may bind himself to pay for his necessary meat, drinks, apparell, necessary physicke, and such other necessaries, and likewise for his good teaching or instruction, whereby he may profite himself afterwards.
The word ‘necessaries’ is rather misleading in that it implies that only the bare essentials of life are included. The concept is a relative one, as what could amount to necessaries may vary considerably according to the circumstances of the particular individual.23 Two questions must be considered: What is included in the concept of ‘necessaries’? What liability will a minor face in respect of contracts for necessaries?
[page 313] [15-10] Concept of ‘necessaries’. The question is whether what was supplied was in fact necessary for the individual minor concerned. In jurisdictions other than New South Wales,24 the sale of goods legislation, codifying the common law, provides that where necessaries are sold and delivered to an infant he or she must pay a reasonable price for them. ‘Necessaries’ in this section means goods suitable to the condition in life of such infant, and to his or her actual requirements at the time of the sale and delivery.25 It is necessary to examine the social position and means (both present and prospective) of the minor, as well as his or her age and occupation. Regard must be paid to the type of goods which someone in the minor’s situation might reasonably have been expected to possess.26 A married minor is on these principles liable not only for necessary goods purchased for his or her personal use, but also for those purchased by him or her for his or her spouse and children.27 It is not sufficient to show that the goods in question were capable of being necessaries for the particular minor. It is essential to show in addition that they were in fact necessary for the minor in that he or she was not already adequately supplied with similar goods. Whether or not the supplier was aware of this fact is irrelevant.28 Thus, in Nash v Inman29 an undergraduate had purchased, but not paid for, a number of fancy waistcoats. When it was proved on the evidence of the defendant’s father that he was, at the time of the purchase, already adequately supplied with clothes provided by the father, it was held that the question of whether the waistcoats were capable of being necessaries did not arise. This rule puts the trader who has supplied goods to a minor in a difficult position, as the onus of proving that the minor was not adequately supplied lies on the trader, but the rule has been justified on the basis that otherwise the protection afforded to minors would be seriously diminished. The courts have attempted to draw a distinction between articles of utility (which might be necessaries) and purely luxurious articles (which cannot be necessaries).30 It cannot be said that the attempt has been particularly successful. The truth is that what might be considered to be essential items by some, would appear to others to be mere extravagances. Articles of ornament, so long as they were not too extravagant for the particular minor and were such as one in the minor’s social position might be expected to possess, may in fact be held to be necessaries.31
[page 314] [15-11] Particular contracts. A minor is no less bound to pay for necessary services rendered. Thus, a minor may be liable for the supply of medical services,32 for the supply of transportation,33 and for legal services.34 Contracts for the education of the minor may also be binding.35 A minor may also be bound by contracts of employment and of apprenticeship. In the case of an apprentice the contract is to some extent a contract for education, but this is not essential and a minor is bound by contracts of employment whereby he or she is enabled to earn a living, even though no element of instruction is involved.36 The question has arisen in a number of cases where the issue was whether a covenant in restraint of trade37 contained in a contract made during minority was binding on the employee. Some contracts have been considered sufficiently analogous to contracts of employment or instruction as to justify their enforcement.38 [15-12] Benefit alone insufficient. It might be thought that these cases were tending to establish a rule that any contract which is for the minor’s benefit is binding on the minor. There are statements in older cases that any contract for a minor’s benefit is binding on a minor.39 However, the better view is that benefit alone is never sufficient to render a contract binding upon a minor. The contract must, in addition, be capable of being brought within the confines of the rather technical concept of a contract for necessaries. If the rule were otherwise, the frequent insistence by the judges that some articles could not be necessary for any minor, no matter how wealthy, would have been quite unnecessary. For example, in Bojczuk v Gregorcewicz,40 a minor’s uncle bought a ticket for her to emigrate from Poland to Australia. She had asked him to do so and agreed to repay the amount involved after her arrival in Australia. Although the contract was for her benefit, she did not have to pay. She did not come to Australia for the purpose of furthering her education or to obtain employment, and the contract could not be regarded as one for necessaries or analogous thereto. [15-13] Overall benefit to minor. Even contracts which may seem binding as contracts for necessaries will not bind a minor if they contain provisions which are so unfair as to render the contract as a whole, one that is, in the circumstances, not for his or her benefit. The issue has normally arisen in the cases in the context of contracts of employment or instruction,
[page 315] but there seems no doubt that the same principles apply generally to contracts for necessaries.41 In De Francesco v Barnum42 it was emphasised that the occurrence in a contract of a clause clearly disadvantageous to a minor does not necessarily mean that the contract must fail: [I]t is obvious that the contract of apprenticeship or the contract of labour must, like any other contract, contain some stipulations for the benefit of the one contracting party, and some for the benefit of the other … The Court must look at the whole contract, having regard to the circumstances of the case, and determine … whether the contract is or is not beneficial.
It is on this basis that a minor has been held bound in a number of cases by a clause in restraint of trade contained in an employment or apprenticeship contract.43 Among the relevant factors in determining whether a particular provision has the effect of rendering a contract as a whole unfair is whether the provision is of a type that is common in contracts of the kind in question. But it is ultimately for the court to decide whether, despite the provision objected to, the contract as a whole can be said to be beneficial to the minor. Where, for example, a minor enters into a contract (such as one for the purchase of goods or services on credit, or for personal transportation), the presence in the contract of a wide exclusion clause may produce the result that the contract is not binding on the minor, even if the clause is of a type commonly found to be used in such transactions.44 [15-14] Loans for the purchase of necessaries. Minors are only liable on contracts for necessaries. They are not liable to repay a loan given for necessaries, the rationale being that they might not use the money as intended.45 However, at common law a person who purchases necessaries for a minor at the minor’s request may recover the reasonable cost of them from the minor.46 In equity a person who lends money to a minor for the purchase of necessaries is subrogated to the seller’s rights against the minor in respect of the money spent on necessaries.47 The lender has a similar right where the money is used to discharge liabilities under a contract which is binding on the minor until avoided and which has not been avoided by the minor.48 [page 316]
[15-15] Executory contracts for necessaries.49 Lack of capacity to contract is not a defence to a claim based on the receipt of necessary goods or services. However, it is not clear whether the claim against the minor is contractual or restitutionary. One view is that a minor’s liability for necessaries is never contractual, the liability being one imposed by law in respect of benefits actually received.50 The other view is that in respect of necessaries a minor does have, by way of exception to the general rule, contractual capacity and is, therefore, bound by an executory contract.51
Contracts Not for Necessaries [15-16] Voidable contracts. Contracts which are not contracts for necessaries are said to be voidable at the minor’s election, although the other contracting party is bound and may not plead the lack of capacity of the minor.52 The contract can be enforced by the minor either during minority or after attaining majority.53 Most contracts are not binding on minors in the sense that they may repudiate them and thereby avoid liability. Some contracts are binding unless repudiated either during minority or within a reasonable time of attaining majority. Once such reasonable time has elapsed, or if the contract is effectively confirmed after majority, the former minor is bound.54 Other contracts are not binding on the minor unless ratified by the minor on attaining majority. In such cases some positive act whereby the minor adopts or confirms the contract is necessary in order that he or she should become bound by it. [15-17] Contracts binding unless repudiated. The category of contracts which are binding unless repudiated includes: contracts whereby a minor acquires property of a permanent nature to which continuing obligations are attached.55 A clear example is a contract under which a minor acquires a leasehold interest in land;56 [page 317] where a minor acquires an estate in land,57 although in most cases it is difficult to see what continuing obligations the minor is subject to under the contract
following completion; contracts where a minor purchases shares from a company, at any rate if the shares are not fully paid up;58 contracts for marriage settlements;59 contracts for the purchase of the goodwill of a business.60 A similar rule applies to a minor who joins a partnership.61 There is some support for a wider view that to be included also within this category are all contracts involving continuing rights and duties under which a minor has taken a benefit.62 [15-18] Contracts not binding unless ratified. Most contracts are not binding on a minor unless ratified by him or her on attaining majority. In this case a minor who takes no positive step to confirm the contract is not bound by it. The minor is bound only if he or she affirms it on attaining majority. The distinction was made clear by the appropriate forms of common law pleading. (1) In the ordinary case a person sued in respect of a contract entered into during minority could simply plead that he or she was a minor at the time of contract. If established, this was a complete defence unless the plaintiff in turn established a ratification of the contract.63 (2) Where the contract was of the type which was binding unless repudiated, a simple plea of minority was bad. The plea must further have alleged that the contract had been repudiated during minority or within a reasonable time of attaining majority.64 This rule was felt to be undesirable in that it could leave a minor open to undesirable pressure from creditors to ratify, on reaching majority, contracts previously entered into as a result of youthful indiscretion. Consequently, the effect of ratification was restricted in England in 1828 by the Statute of Frauds (Amendment) Act (Lord Tenterden’s Act). It was thereby provided that: [N]o action shall be maintained whereby to charge any person upon any promise made after full age to pay any debt contracted during infancy, or upon any ratification made after full age of any promise or simple contract
[page 318] made during infancy, unless such promise or ratification shall be made by some writing signed by the party to be charged therewith.
Similar legislation was enacted in Queensland, New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory (but has since been repealed in New South Wales and Queensland).65 In Western Australia and the Northern Territory the United Kingdom legislation is apparently still in force, being Imperial legislation which originally applied to the colonies and has never been replaced. The United Kingdom legislation was originally in force in South Australia for the same reason.66 In South Australia it has been provided by s 4 of the Minors’ Contracts (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1979 that where a person has entered into a contract that is, by reason of his or her minority at the time of entering into the contract, unenforceable against him or her, the contract shall remain unenforceable against him or her unless it is ratified by him or her, in writing, on or after the day on which he or she attains his or her majority. In Victoria it is further provided that any agreement, whether in writing or not, made after majority to repay a loan contracted during minority is void.67 In Victoria the legislation concerning ratification goes even further. The effect of the provision is that no action can be brought on any promise made after majority to pay any debt contracted during minority, or on a ratification made after majority of any promise or contract made during minority, whether or not there was any new consideration for the promise or ratification.68 The distinction noted above between ratification and a fresh promise is relevant here, with the result that in that State a fresh promise to perform a promise or contract other than a debt will be enforceable though a mere ratification is not.69 [15-19] Repudiation. A contract which is not binding on a minor may be repudiated by the minor during minority.70 No formalities are required for the repudiation of a contract by a minor, the repudiation often in practice taking the form of an assertion of a defence based on lack of capacity when steps are taken to enforce the contract. This appears to be an application of the general principle that unequivocal words or conduct are required for election between rights.71 A contract which is not binding unless ratified does not require repudiation and thus the minor is not bound by any obligations arising [page 319] under the contract, whether or not those obligations have already accrued. In the case of contracts which are binding until repudiated, the minor is not liable in respect of any obligations which would not have accrued until after the
repudiation. As regards those obligations which have already become due prior to the repudiation the position is less clear, although there is some authority that the minor is bound.72 [15-20] Effect of repudiation on obligations of minor. A minor is not liable in respect of any future obligations under a repudiated contract. This is true in respect of obligations which have accrued due, but remain unperformed, at the time of repudiation. Thus a minor who purchases goods which are not necessaries is not obliged to pay the purchase price, even though he or she may in fact have received and used those goods. Once the contract has been repudiated, the minor may be entitled to restitution in relation to payments made prior to repudiation. The traditional view is that the minor may succeed only if there has been a total failure in performance, that is, a total failure of consideration.73 In South Australia it is provided that where a person has avoided a contract on the grounds of his or her minority and, before the avoidance of the contract, property passed under it to another party to the contract, a court may order restitution of that property.74 Such an order may be made on such terms and conditions as the court considers just and may be made notwithstanding that the minor has received some benefit under the contract or that any other party has partly performed his or her obligations under the contract. [15-21] Effect of repudiation on obligations of adult. An adult contracting with a minor is in no better position than the minor, and is usually in a worse position. Restitutionary claims by an adult against a minor have rarely succeeded. For example, an adult who had paid for goods which the minor seller later refused to deliver could not recover his money in restitution.75 Also, if the adult has delivered goods to a minor who refuses to pay for them, it is generally assumed that the adult cannot recover that property. These principles do need to be reconsidered in light of the adoption of unjust enrichment in place of implied contract, which was the basis of earlier decisions.76 [15-22] Effect of fraud by minor. An adult who contracts with a minor as a result of the minor’s fraudulent representation concerning majority is in a stronger position.77 The minor is not estopped by fraud from relying on [page 320]
lack of capacity as a defence if the minor is sued on the contract. Nor may the minor be sued in an action in tort for deceit, because although a minor is generally liable for torts, the minor is not liable in tort where the awarding of damages would amount to the indirect enforcement of an unenforceable contract.78 Nonetheless, the minor’s fraud does make certain relief available to the other party in equity, though the extent of this relief is a matter of debate. Certainly the minor is liable to restore property which remains in his or her possession and which had been obtained as a result of the minor’s fraud. The minor may be required to release the other party from obligations or acts induced by the fraud.79 Although this relief would in many cases go a long way towards restoring to the adult what he or she had lost as a result of the minor’s fraud, equity stops short of enforcing the contract. No award of damages against the minor will be made. A minor who has obtained a loan by fraud and has spent the proceeds may not be forced to repay the sum borrowed. Where the minor has obtained property and disposed of it, the minor may not be ordered to pay the value of that property,80 unless the property can be traced. Again these principles might be reconsidered in light of developments of the law of restitution. [15-23] Statutory modification of the common law. The common law rules have been modified by infants’ relief legislation in Victoria.81 This provides that the following contracts entered into by a minor are void: contracts for the repayment of money lent or to be lent; contracts for payment for goods supplied or to be supplied, other than necessaries; accounts stated. Despite the use of the word ‘void’, the same rule applies to the recovery of money paid as with a contract governed by the common law. Accordingly, the money or property is not recoverable (in restitution) unless there is a total failure of consideration.82 It has sometimes been suggested that money is recoverable where the minor can make substantial restitution of any consideration received.83 The delivery of goods to a minor who purchases under a ‘void’ contract, provided it was made with the intention to pass property, will be effective to do so.84 [15-24] Liability in tort. At common law minors, when old enough to appreciate the seriousness and consequences of their actions, are liable in tort.85 This is, however, subject to the important qualification that a minor
[page 321] is not liable in tort where to hold the minor liable would amount to the indirect enforcement of an otherwise unenforceable contract. Thus, a minor who hires goods and damages them by negligent use may not be sued in tort, for to allow such an action would, it is said, in substance amount to holding the minor liable for the breach of the contract.86 On the other hand, minors are not totally immune in that they will be liable if the wrongful act is independent of the contract in the sense of not being an act of the kind contemplated by it.87 Thus, where a minor hired a horse and was expressly told that it was not fit for jumping, he was held liable in tort when the horse was injured in attempting to jump it over a fence, as this was not within the purpose of the hiring.88 The same reasoning was applied where it was sought to make a minor who had misappropriated money liable in restitution.89 Where a minor has induced another by fraud to enter into a contract, usually by a misrepresentation that the minor is of full age, fraud does not, whether by the operation of an estoppel or otherwise render a minor liable on the contract.90 Further, the minor cannot be held liable for the tort of deceit91 or a failure to return goods purchased under a contract which is not binding on the minor. [15-25] Guarantees of contractual obligations of a minor. A minor who wishes to purchase goods or services on credit will usually find that the prospective supplier requires an adult’s guarantee. Where the minor’s contract is merely voidable at the minor’s option (and not void) and the obligation of the guarantor is an accessory obligation, the guarantor will not be liable where the minor has repudiated the principal contract.92 However, an adult will be liable if the contract is construed as one of indemnity rather than of guarantee, because in that case the adult is liable as a principal irrespective of whether the minor is also liable. These difficulties are avoided in New South Wales, South Australia and Tasmania where it is provided that a guarantor of a minor’s contract is bound to the extent to which the guarantor would have been bound if the minor had been of full age.93 [page 322]
Minors’ Contracts in New South Wales
[15-26] Background. In New South Wales the law of minors is governed by the Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970 (NSW),94 which is an attempt to recast the prior common law and which operates as a code. The Act was the result of the New South Wales Law Reform Commission’s recommendations of 1969.95 A number of other law reform bodies have examined the matter and it has correctly been remarked that ‘it is perhaps indicative of the difficulties in this area of law that these reports do not disclose a common approach, still less, a common set of recommendations’.96 [15-27] ‘Civil acts’ which are ‘presumptively binding’. The central concept in the Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970 (NSW) is the ‘civil act’, which is defined to mean ‘any act relating to contractual or proprietary rights or obligations or to any chose in action, whether having effect at law or in equity’ (s 6(1)). The scheme of the Act is to deal with the effect of a civil act in which a minor has participated, and the Act therefore has important implications far beyond the law of contract. Under s 6(3) a presumptively binding civil act is one which is as binding on a minor as if he or she were not under the disability of infancy at the time of his or her participation in the civil act. In other words, the validity of the civil act may not be attacked on the basis that one of the parties to it is a minor, but defences based on other vitiating factors (such as fraud, mistake or illegality) remain available. [15-28] Beneficial contracts. Section 19 of the Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970 (NSW) provides that where a minor participates in a civil act and such participation is for the minor’s benefit, at the time of participation, that civil act is presumptively binding on the minor.97 So, where a minor has entered into a contract, the sole question arising when it is sought to determine whether the minor may escape liability on the ground of minority is whether entering into the contract was for his or her benefit. A minor may be bound under s 19 in a much wider range of circumstances than is the case at common law, and in particular there is in New South Wales no longer any absolute rule that a minor will never be bound by a trading contract or a contract of loan. Also, the minor is presumptively bound even though the contract is executory.98 [page 323] [15-29] Grant of capacity. We have seen99 that at common law there is no
means whereby a minor may, prior to attaining the age of majority, be freed from the disabilities of minority, whether by parental emancipation or judicial decree. Section 26 of the Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970 (NSW) now empowers the Supreme Court to make an order granting a minor capacity to enter into all civil acts (amounting to a general grant of adult capacity for the purposes of civil acts). The court may also grant capacity to enter into any description of civil acts or a specific civil act. The court will only make the order if it is satisfied that the making of the order will be for the benefit of the minor, and any contract or other civil act entered into pursuant to such an order is presumptively binding on the minor. [15-30] Affirmation. Under s 30 of the Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970 (NSW), once a minor attains the age of 18, he or she may affirm, and thus render presumptively binding on the minor, any civil act in which he or she participated during minority. An incentive towards affirmation is provided by the fact that the minor may not enforce against any other party a contract which is not presumptively binding on the minor (s 39). It is not necessary that the affirmation be in writing; it is expressly provided that the affirmation may be by conduct. Although a minor may not affirm a contract while a minor, it may be affirmed on the minor’s behalf by a court if the court considers that affirmation will be for his or her benefit (s 30). [15-31] Repudiation. A minor who has entered into a contract which is not presumptively binding may repudiate that contract at any time prior to the minor’s 19th birthday, provided that the contract is not, at the time of repudiation, for the minor’s benefit: Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970 (NSW), s 31. The repudiation is, however, ineffective unless certain formalities, requiring the service of written notice, are complied with (s 33). Alternatively, a court may repudiate on behalf of the minor at any time prior to his or her 18th birthday, provided that the contract does not appear to the court to be for the benefit of the minor (s 34). Any contract which is not presumptively binding on the minor will automatically become so if not effectively repudiated prior to his or her 19th birthday (s 38). Moreover, the power of the courts to adjust the rights of the parties to a contract which is not presumptively binding arise only once the contract has been repudiated. Any person interested in a contract into which a minor has entered may require a court to elect to affirm or to repudiate on behalf of the minor (s 36). [15-32] Adjustment upon repudiation. Adjustment will be necessary on the
repudiation of a contract the performance of which resulted in the transfer of benefits. So on repudiation of a contract the courts acquire a jurisdiction under s 37 of the Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970 (NSW) to adjust the rights of the parties to the contract. [page 324] A wide discretion is given to produce a result that is fair to all parties. The court may, if it thinks fit, confirm (and enforce) the contract in whole or in part. However, the basic aim is to attempt so far as is practicable to restore the parties to their positions prior to the time that the contract was made. This aim is qualified where one of the parties has derived ‘property, services or other things’ under the contract. In that case an adult party will be ordered to make just compensation for what has been received, and a party who is (or was, at the time of contracting) a minor will be ordered to make just compensation to the extent that what the minor received is for his or her benefit. Presumably such ‘compensation’ will be ordered only where the benefit received is not capable of being restored to the other party. Except in so far as compensation must be ordered in respect of benefits which have been received and cannot be returned (for example, the benefit of services rendered under the contract) the court’s discretion is not limited. [15-33] Adjustment where disposition of property presumptively binding. If a civil act is presumptively binding on a minor, no repudiation or adjustment of rights is possible: s 37 of the Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970 (NSW). Section 20 provides that where a disposition of property is made by a minor pursuant to a contract and he or she receives at least part of the consideration, which is not manifestly inadequate, the disposition of property is presumptively binding on the minor. Similarly, where a minor purchases property for consideration that is not manifestly excessive, the minor is presumptively bound. Section 20 does not render the contract as such presumptively binding on the minor, who will not be liable under the contract in respect of any outstanding obligations on his or her part, but he or she will be unable to insist on the property transferred being re-vested in the party who made the disposition.100 As the contract is not presumptively binding on the minor, the seller may not, unless the contract has been affirmed, sue the minor for any balance outstanding of the purchase price. Alternatively, once the contract has been repudiated the court
must, if requested by the seller, make an order under s 37. The court is not bound, in assessing the compensation to be paid by the minor, by the contractually agreed price. [15-34] Certificates under ss 28 and 29. Sections 28 and 29 of the Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970 (NSW) provide a procedure whereby the presumptively binding nature of a disposition of property for consideration made by or to a minor may be established at the time the disposition is made. Once a disposition becomes presumptively binding in this manner, the same consequences flow as where a disposition has become presumptively binding under s 20. The disposition must be made pursuant to a certificate, issued not more than seven days before the making of the disposition, given by the Public Trustee or an independently [page 325] instructed and employed solicitor. The certificate must state a number of matters referred to in ss 28 and 29, including that the person giving it is satisfied that the consideration is not manifestly excessive or inadequate as the case may be. [15-35] Liability in tort. The rule protecting a minor from liability in tort where the cause of action in tort is in substance a cause of action in contract101 is abolished by s 48 of the Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970 (NSW).
Mental Disability (Including Intoxication) [15-36] General principle. A person (not being ‘found’ or ‘certified’ as insane) was not allowed to ‘stultify’ or ‘disable’ himself or herself, that is, to escape responsibility for acts by setting up his or her own mental incapacity or drunkenness.102 However, unsoundness of mind and intoxication are under the modern law good defences to an action to enforce a contract, so long as it can be shown that:103 (1) the defendant was not of capacity to contract; and (2) the plaintiff knew this.
[15-37] Extent of influence. The test of the nature and extent of influence has been variously described, including: ‘so lunatic, or drunk, as not to know what he was about when he made a promise or sealed an instrument’;104 not ‘capable of understanding the nature of the contract’;105 not ‘capable of understanding what he was about’.106 In Gibbons v Wright107 the High Court said that each party must have ‘such soundness of mind as to be capable of understanding the general nature of what he is doing by his participation’108 and ‘the capacity to understand [the] transaction when it is explained’.109 The court thought that ordinarily what was to be understood was the ‘broad operation’ or ‘general purport’ of an instrument but that in some cases it might be the effect of a wider transaction which the instrument was a means of carrying out. [page 326] [15-38] Awareness of other party. The courts came to allow an exception to the principle that ‘no man of full age shall be received in any plea by the law to stultify and disable his own person’110 if it could be shown that the other contracting party had ‘imposed upon’ or ‘taken advantage of’ the mentally incompetent. This test has always been satisfied by (indeed it seems to have become equated with) proof that he or she knew or ought to have known of the incapacity.111 Lopes LJ in Imperial Loan Co v Stone112 summarised the principle to be deduced from the cases in these terms:113 A defendant who seeks to avoid a contract on the ground of his insanity, must plead and prove, not merely his incapacity, but also the plaintiff’s knowledge of that fact, and unless he proves these two things he cannot succeed.
[15-39] Contract void or voidable? A contract with a person who lacks capacity because of mental disability is not void but is voidable. The contract can be ratified by the disabled party.114 In relation to signed contracts, there is a distinction between lack of intention to sign,115 and persons who intend to sign but lack understanding. The former makes the contract void ab initio, and allows the defence of non est factum.116 The latter makes the contract voidable only. [15-40] Executed and executory contracts. The requirement that the other party must have known of the disability developed in cases in which contracts
had been executed and it was impossible for the status quo to be restored. The other party’s change of position gave rise to some ‘equity’ or claim of right which competed with sympathy for the mentally disabled person. But the courts have declined to distinguish between executed and executory contracts in this respect.117 [15-41] Unfairness without knowledge of mental disability. Where the unsoundness of a contracting party’s mind is not known to the other party, the contract’s validity is determined by the same standards as the validity of a contract by a person of sound mind. Therefore, mere ‘unfairness’ will not vitiate it.118 Since the modern development of the law [page 327] concerning unconscionable bargains,119 the kind of unfair contract referred to should be treated as one example of a contract governed by those principles rather than as one to be treated under the rubric of mental incapacity. [15-42] A more flexible position in equity? Although a contract may be valid at law in accordance with the foregoing principles, equity may refuse specific performance and even order rescission upon proof of a less substantial overbearing. Or equity may act upon the ground of constructive fraud if there has been unconscionable conduct amounting to exploitation of inequality of bargaining power. Often, while having enough misgivings to refuse specific performance, the court has also refused rescission, leaving the other party to the common law remedy of damages.120 [15-43] Ratification. Once a contracting party has recovered mental capacity, words or conduct consistent only with the contract’s continuance will render it binding. If rescission does not take place promptly, silence while others alter their positions on the footing of the contract’s subsistence, may be deemed an affirmation.121 [15-44] Necessaries. Under the common law, in respect of necessaries supplied to him or her, the mentally disabled person was bound by a contract implied at law to pay a reasonable price, though only out of and to the extent of his or her own property and only if the circumstances did not displace the notion of obligation, for example, by indicating a supply by way of gift.122 The sale of goods legislation now provides that ‘where necessaries are sold and delivered to
a person who, by reason of mental incapacity or drunkenness, is incompetent to contract, he must pay a reasonable price therefor’.123 Clearly, the ‘reasonable price’ referred to will not necessarily be the contract price. [15-45] Burden of proof. The onus of proof of mental disability rests on the person setting it up, but where such disability of a permanent nature is established, the onus of proving that the contract was made during a lucid interval is on the other party.124 [page 328]
Corporations [15-46] Meaning of ‘corporation’. A corporation is an individual or group of individuals invested with legal personality (the capacity to have legal rights and duties) other than that legal personality which is allowed to each individual upon birth in our legal system. Since our legal system recognises all individuals as having legal personality from birth, it is sometimes said that corporations (or ‘bodies corporate’) are entities having ‘artificial’ or ‘fictional’ legal personality as contrasted with the ‘natural’ legal personality of the individual. But, strictly speaking, all legal personality is a construct of the legal system and is to this extent artificial. Corporations may be corporations sole or corporations aggregate. The former consists of one individual who is an office-holder. The latter comprises two or more individuals. Illustrations are universities, local government councils and companies which are incorporated upon registration under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). [15-47] Three aspects of contracts by corporations. Three aspects of the contracts by corporations are: (1) vires, that is, the power or capacity of the body corporate to become legally bound; (2) the making of the decision to contract (corresponding to the natural person’s mental act of assenting to contract); and (3) the mode of expression of contractual assent (this has always posed special difficulties for bodies corporate since they lack the normal
contracting ‘equipment’ of the natural person, namely a mouth with which to speak and a hand with which to write). Another issue is pre-incorporation contracts.125 Our main concern here is with companies governed by the corporations legislation.126
Vires [15-48] The doctrine of ultra vires. The doctrine of ‘ultra vires’ is a doctrine that where an entity’s legal capacity is limited, a purported contractual assent lying outside that capacity (ultra vires) is a nullity. Until recently, a corporation’s capacity depended on the terms of its constitution (also known as a memorandum of association). Any attempt by the corporation to contract outside the listed powers was ultra vires. [15-49] Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). Section 124 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) provides that a company has the legal capacity of a natural person as well as certain specified powers peculiarly appropriate to companies. Under s 125(1) of the Corporations Act, if a company has a constitution, it may contain an express restriction on, or a prohibition of, [page 329] the company’s exercise of any of its powers. However, s 125(1) states that ‘exercise of a power by the company is not invalid merely because it is contrary to an express restriction or prohibition in the company’s constitution’. Again, under s 125(2) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), if a company has a constitution, it may set out the company’s objects. However, s 125(2) also states that an ‘act of the company is not invalid merely because it is contrary to or beyond any objects in the company’s constitution’.
Expression and Formation of Contractual Assent
[15-50] Agency principles. All contracts by bodies corporate must be made through the instrumentality of human beings and are generally regulated by the general principles governing the making of contracts through agents. A natural person may become bound contractually if a contract is made by that person or an agent. The most straightforward case is the one where the contract falls within the actual authority delegated by the principal to an agent. Thus, where A authorises B to buy a horse from C up to a price of $5000 and B buys it from C for $4500, B has contracted within the authority given and A is bound. Actual authority may be express (as in the illustration) or implied (as, for example, from a position or office to which A has appointed B). If B’s authority is exceeded, A is prima facie not bound but may be bound in two situations: A may have previously represented to C that B does have authority from A to make the particular contract or to make contracts of a class which includes the particular one. Although B does not have that authority when contracting with C (A may have revoked B’s authority and forgotten to inform C of this) A will be bound contractually to C because, so far as C was concerned, B had ‘apparent’ or ‘ostensible’ authority from A to make that contract. Although B had neither actual nor apparent authority, A will become bound by a contract which B makes on A’s behalf if A ‘ratifies’ (‘adopts’ or ‘affirms’) the contract. Thus, the legal acts which will cause a natural person to become contractually bound are the act of contracting itself, of delegation of authority, a representation or holding out, and finally an act of ratification. [15-51] Contracts by companies and company agents under the Corporations Act. Sections 126 and 127 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) deal with the position of an agent exercising a company’s power to make contracts, and the execution of documents. Section 126 provides: (1) A company’s power to make, vary, ratify or discharge a contract may be exercised by an individual acting with the company’s express or implied authority and on behalf of the company. The power may be exercised without using a common seal. (2) This section does not affect the operation of a law that requires a particular procedure to be complied with in relation to the contract. [page 330]
Section 127 provides two statutory methods by which a company may execute documents generally, including deeds. One method involves use of the common seal if the company has elected to have a common seal and elects to use it for executing the document (s 127(2)). The sealing must be witnessed by relevant individuals (for example, directors). The other method requires signature by relevant individuals (for example, directors) (s 127(1). These provisions apply to all corporations incorporated or taken to be incorporated under the legislation. [15-52] Contracts by agents of other corporations. Sections 126 and 127 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) apply to all companies incorporated or deemed to be incorporated under the legislation.127 Victoria and Queensland have legislated generally in respect of the making, otherwise than under seal, of contracts by other bodies corporate. The Instruments (Corporate Bodies Contracts) Act 1967 (Vic) (inserting s 31(a) in the Instruments Act 1958 (Vic)) and s 227 of the Property Law Act 1974 (Qld) enable them to make, vary or discharge contracts in the same modes as individuals. The sections do not prevent such bodies corporate from making, varying or discharging a contract under their common seals. In the other jurisdictions where the common law applies, in the absence of any special provision in the incorporating statute, a contract is not binding unless under seal except where inconvenience amounting almost to necessity or essentiality to the achievement of the purpose of incorporation demands otherwise: where the corporation is a trading company and the contract is in the course of trading;128 and where a contract is of little importance and of a frequently occurring kind so that it would be obstructive of the corporation’s interests to require sealing.129
Pre-incorporation Contracts [15-53] Pre-incorporation contracts under the general law. Under the general law a contract made on behalf of a non-existent company did not bind the company once it was incorporated; nor could the company ratify it, although it might bind the signatories personally.130 Where it is clear that the parties intend to contract with the company and that signatures are added merely to authenticate the signature of the company, and it transpires that the company was
not in existence, there is no contract with anyone.131 [page 331] [15-54] Pre-incorporation contracts under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). Section 131 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) empowers a company within a reasonable time after incorporation to ratify its pre-incorporation contracts entered into a reasonable time before incorporation. Ratification may be effected in the same manner as that allowed for the making of a contract in s 126. Upon ratification the company is bound and benefited by the contract as if it had been incorporated prior to the contract and had been a party to it. Where ratification does not occur, the person or persons who purported to execute the contract on behalf of the non-existent company are liable in damages equal to the amount for which the company would have been liable if it had been formed and ratified, but had failed to perform any of its obligations under the contract and the contract had been discharged because of that.
Unincorporated Associations [15-55] General. Unlike the corporation, an unincorporated association has no legal personality distinct from that of its members.132 So it has no contractual capacity of itself, and yet its contractual capacity is co-extensive with that of its members. An association is like a crowd: one can say that ‘the crowd is still there’ when in fact the individuals constituting it are changing continually and only the object of their interest is constant.133 [15-56] Identification of contracting party. If there is an intention to contract with the ‘entity’ or the members as they exist from time to time, the contract is a nullity.134 But in order to sustain the expectation of the parties that they are creating legal rights and obligations, a court will attempt to find an intention to contract with natural persons, be they the members of the association at the time of the contract or, as is more commonly found, all or some of the members of its managing committee or council.135 In Bradley Egg Farm Ltd v Clifford,136 for example, where a poultry farmer had had certain of his fowls tested by the unincorporated Lancashire Union Poultry Society to ascertain if they had certain diseases and the fowls had to be
destroyed as a result of tests conducted by an employee of the Society’s council, the farmer succeeded not only against the employee but against the [page 332] members of the council. The members who had no liability beyond their annual membership subscription were discarded and the members of the executive council were chosen to bear legal liability. In New South Wales and Queensland the same approach has been taken with the same adverse result for office-holders and committee members.137 In relation to contracts whose performance extends beyond the period of incumbency of the committee members, the approach of making the members of its managing committee or council liable is not so readily available. Accordingly, a court will not so readily infer that the persons in office originally were parties to such a contract.138 [15-57] Other difficulties and reform. The inability of the law to accommodate contracts with unincorporated associations has prompted judicial observations on the need for reform.139 Moreover, the foregoing treatment has been concerned only with the difficulty of identifying the contracting parties and thus the persons liable in a contractual action. Further difficulties arise as to the rights, if any, of the parties held contractually liable to reimburse themselves out of the funds of the association or to recover from the members by way of indemnity, and as to an association’s capacity to be the recipient of gifts (particularly bequests and devises) and to be owner and occupier of property.140 All these difficulties are substantially overcome if an association is incorporated.141
The Crown and Its Instrumentalities142 [15-58] Procedure: the Crown as litigant. The common law rule that the Crown, being the fountain of justice, could not be forced as defendant into the courts of the land, and so could not be made liable in respect of contractual undertakings, has been overcome by legislation. In Australia that legislation is to be found in the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) and an Act in each State and Territory.143 Even when the rule applied it was necessary to
[page 333] distinguish from ‘the Crown’, public officers and bodies which might be created as bodies corporate, that is, bodies invested with a legal personality of their own delineated in the charter or Act of parliament setting them up, such as the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. If their charter or special Act did not say otherwise, their possession of legal personality meant that there was no procedural impediment to their being sued and found liable on contracts made by them. [15-59] Ultra vires. The doctrine of ultra vires144 is a limitation on the contractual capacity of the ‘commissions’, ‘boards’, ‘councils’, and ‘authorities’ that are a familiar feature of modern regulatory and welfare legislation.145 Further, subject to statutory provision, their contracts must be made under common seal. No specific statutory authority is necessary for any Crown contract which is ‘in the ordinary course of administering a recognised part of the government of the State’.146 However, tying the Commonwealth’s contractual capacity to a law of the Commonwealth has the effect of limiting that capacity to an extent commensurate with the Commonwealth’s legislative capacity. The preferable view is that contractual rights and duties are created by voluntary act rather than by statute with the result that the Commonwealth’s contracting power is not necessarily limited in the same way as its legislative power. Equally, even though parliament may have the power to enact legislation in respect of a matter, and notwithstanding that the Crown may enter into a contract in advance of parliamentary appropriation of funds to satisfy the contract, there is no general capacity in the Crown to contract without statutory authority or ratification.147 [15-60] Parliamentary control over public monies and discretion. It is now accepted that absence of parliamentary appropriation does not go to validity but is an answer to a claim to enforce recovery of a money judgment arising out of the contract.148 The desirability of an unfettered discretion can influence the construction of the extent of obligation being assumed by the Crown in a particular contract.149 Yet it is not possible to ‘read down’ the Crown’s obligations in all cases. It has been argued that where the Crown breaks a
[page 334] contract in what it conceives to be the public interest, the general principles of contract law requiring payment of damages adequately govern the respective positions of the contracting parties.150 Yet there is authority for the view that the Crown is not even liable in damages in the case of contracts ‘which concern the welfare of the State’ as distinct from ‘commercial contracts’.151 In the case of commercial contracts such as a contract to pay for advertising, the Crown is clearly liable and must perform subject to the provision by parliament of sufficient monies.152 [15-61] Agency principles. It is necessary for a workable government that powers vested in Ministers be capable of being exercised by their officers. Principles of actual and ostensible authority of agents are applicable to contracts made by government officers.153 A court will more easily find that an officer has ostensible authority in the case of contracts providing for the carrying on of the ordinary, well recognised activities or functions of government than in the case of extra-ordinary contracts.154
Bankrupts and Married Women [15-62] Bankruptcy. Bankruptcy does not affect contractual capacity, that is, the capacity of a person to become contractually bound. However, the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth) governs the operation of contracts made by a person who is at the time, or subsequently becomes, bankrupt. Timing of the contract relative to the bankruptcy is important. (1) Effect of bankruptcy on pre-bankruptcy contracts: Upon bankruptcy, contracts previously entered into do not come to an end: the bankrupt’s contractual rights vest under s 58(1) of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth) in the trustee in bankruptcy for the benefit of the bankrupt’s creditors.155 Rights accrued prior to bankruptcy against the bankrupt out of a contract (for example, a right to sue for a debt or for damages for breach of contract) are converted into a right to prove as a creditor in the bankruptcy. (2) Effect of bankruptcy on post-bankruptcy contracts. A bankrupt can continue to incur contractual obligations subject to the trustee’s right to intervene and disclaim. In the absence of such intervention, a post-
bankruptcy contract binds the bankrupt. Just as the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth), s 123(1) protects pre-bankruptcy dispositions, s 126(1) provides:156 [page 335] A transaction by a bankrupt with a person dealing with him or her in good faith and for valuable consideration in respect of property acquired by the bankrupt on or after the day on which he or she became a bankrupt is, if completed before any intervention by the trustee, valid against the trustee, and any estate or interest in that property which, by virtue of this Act, is vested in the trustee shall determine and pass in such manner and to such extent as is necessary for giving effect to the transaction.
[15-63] Married women. At common law a married woman lacked contractual capacity and her contracts were void because she had no legal personality separate from that of her husband. By virtue of the marriage her property was vested in her husband. It was lack of property which was the source of the contractual disadvantage experienced by married women until recent times. The position at law was mitigated by equity’s development of the doctrine of the married woman’s separate estate and modified by legislation.157 The practical effect of the legislation is that a married woman now has full contractual capacity,158 subject only to the continued operation in some jurisdictions of restraints upon anticipation. There is now express provision to this effect in Queensland.159 Of course, decisions not to contract with married women or to contract with them only on special terms might be the subject of ‘antidiscrimination’ legislation.160 1.
Borthwick v Carruthers (1787) 1 TR 648; 99 ER 1300.
2.
Family Law Reform Act 1969 (UK); Age of Majority (Scotland) Act 1969 (UK).
3.
ACT: Age of Majority Act 1974; NT: Age of Majority Act 1981; Qld: Age of Majority Act 1974; SA: Age of Majority (Reduction) Act 1971; Tas: Age of Majority Act 1973; Vic: Age of Majority Act 1977; WA: Age of Majority Act 1972.
4.
See, eg Cth: Life Insurance Act 1995, s 199(2) (person who has attained age of 16 has same capacity in relation to life policy as person who has attained the age of 18); Vic: Property Law Act 1958, s 28B (contracts by minors with registered building societies etc for repayment of loans valid).
5.
See generally Harland, Law of Minors in Relation to Contracts and Property, 1974, esp Chapter 2; D R Percy, ‘The Present Law of Infants’ Contracts’ (1975) 53 Can Bar Rev 1.
6.
See O’Brien v O’Brien (1995) 35 NSWLR 664.
7.
See, eg De Garis v Dalgety & Co Ltd [1915] SALR 102; Alliance Acceptance Co Ltd v Hinton (1964)
1 DCR (NSW) 5. 8.
See further [15-09]ff.
9.
Re Constantinople & Alexandria Hotel Co (Ebbett’s Case) (1870) LR 5 Ch App 302; Re Mundy (1963) 19 ABC 165 at 171; Norman Baker Pty Ltd v Baker (1978) 3 ACLR 856. Possibly the position was different if the contract remained purely executory: De Garis v Dalgety & Co Ltd [1915] SALR 102 at 143.
10.
Field v Moore (1855) 7 De G M & G 691 at 706–7; 44 ER 269 at 275; Capes v Hutton (1826) 2 Russ 357; 38 ER 370. For a statutory exception see Life Insurance Act 1999 (Cth), s 199(1). In some jurisdictions the consent of a parent may give validity to a transaction entered into by a minor.
11.
See, eg Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1898 (NSW), s 82.
12.
For discussion of NSW legislation see [15-28]. See also Minors’ Contracts (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1979 (SA), ss 6, 8 which provide that a court may approve a minor’s contract and thus render it as binding as it would have been if the minor had been of full age; a court may also appoint a person to transact any specified business, or business of a specified class, on behalf of a minor, and any liabilities incurred by that person are enforceable against the minor.
13.
Morgan v Thorne (1841) 7 M & W 400 at 408; 151 ER 821 at 825.
14.
Johnson v Clark [1908] 1 Ch 303 at 311–12; IRC v Mills [1975] AC 38 at 53. The common law on this point is preserved in NSW by the Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970, s 18.
15.
See, eg McHale v Watson (1966) 115 CLR 199 (liability of child in negligence).
16.
See [15-10].
17.
See, eg Coan v Bowles (1691) 1 Show 165 at 171; 89 ER 514 at 518; Keane v Boycott (1795) 2 Hy B1 511 at 515; 126 ER 676 at 678.
18.
See, eg Zouch d Abbot & Hallet v Parsons (1765) 3 Burr 1794; 97 ER 1103; Cockshott v Bennett (1788) 2 TR 763; 100 ER 411.
19.
Lumley v Ravenscroft [1895] 1 QB 683; Boyd v Ryan (1947) 48 SR (NSW) 163. It is apparently otherwise where the contract has been ratified upon majority: Kell v Harris (1915) 15 SR (NSW) 473. The rule is based upon the fact that such a contract cannot normally be enforced against the minor and hence the mutuality necessary as a condition for the grant of the remedy of specific performance is lacking. Where the contract can be enforced against the minor (eg under the Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970 (NSW), s 19) the remedy would no doubt be granted in a suitable case.
20.
Allen v Allen (1842) 2 Dr & War (Ir) 307 at 339. This is the position at common law. As to the position with Torrens title land see Francis, Law and Practice Relating to Torrens Title in Australasia, 1973, Vol 2, pp 3–7.
21.
De Francesco v Barnum (1890) 45 Ch D 430; Shears v Mendeloff (1914) 30 TLR 342. It is not clear whether the contracts in these cases were regarded as void or voidable. If they were merely voidable a different result might have been reached.
22.
Co Lit, §172a.
23.
See Peters v Fleming (1840) 6 M & W 42 at 46–7; 151 ER 314 at 315–16.
24.
Section 7 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW) no longer applies to contracts by minors. See further [15-28].
25.
ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 7; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 7; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 5; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 2; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s7; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 7; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 2.
26.
Wharton v McKenzie (1844) 5 QB 606; 114 ER 1378; Nash v Inman [1908] 2 KB 1; Scarborough v
Sturzaker (1905) 1 Tas LR 117. 27.
Chapple v Cooper (1844) 13 M & W 252; 153 ER 105. Query the position of a minor engaged to be married: Quiggan Bros v Baker [1906] VLR 259. Following the provisions of the Marriage Act 1961 (Cth), s 11 on marriageable age there will in any event be few cases of married minors.
28.
Barnes & Co v Toye (1884) 13 QBD 410; Johnstone v Marks (1887) 19 QBD 509.
29.
[1908] 2 KB 1.
30.
Peters v Fleming (1840) 6 M & W 42; 151 ER 314; Ryder v Wombwell (1868) LR 4 Ex 32.
31.
See, eg Gorer v Readon (1869) 20 LT 40.
32.
Huggins v Wiseman (1690) Carth 110; 90 ER 669.
33.
Fawcett v Smethurst (1914) 84 LJKB 473 at 475. But see Bojczuk v Gregorcewicz [1961] SASR 128 (see [15-12]).
34.
Prince v Haworth (1904) 20 TLR 313; McLaughlin v Darcy (1918) 18 SR (NSW) 585 at 595.
35.
Blennerhassett’s Institute of Accountancy Pty Ltd v Gairns (1938) 55 WN (NSW) 89; Minister for Education v Oxwell [1966] WAR 39.
36.
Green v Thompson [1899] 2 QB 1. Compare Hamilton v Lethbridge (1912) 14 CLR 236 (a case involving articles of clerkship).
37.
See generally [15-13]ff.
38.
See, eg McLaughlin v Darcy (1918) 18 SR (NSW) 585 (professional boxer liable to pay for solicitor’s services to obtain visa for tour).
39.
For example, De Garis v Dalgety & Co Ltd [1915] SALR 102 at 156; Slade v Metro-dent Ltd [1953] 2 QB 112.
40.
[1961] SASR 128.
41.
See, eg De Francesco v Barnum (1890) 45 Ch D 430; Sultman v Bond [1956] St R Qd 180; Alliance Acceptance Co Ltd v Hinton (1964) 1 DCR (NSW) 5.
42.
(1890) 45 Ch D 430 at 439. See also Clements v London & NW Ry Co [1894] 2 QB 482.
43.
See, eg Bromley v Smith [1909] 2 KB 235; Gadd v Thompson [1911] 1 KB 304. Cf Sir W C Leng & Co Ltd v Andrews [1909] 1 Ch 763. Hamilton v Lethbridge (1912) 14 CLR 236 is sometimes assumed to be an example of such a case (see particularly the statement by Barton J at 253) but the case was in fact decided on a different ground. As to covenants in restraint of trade see generally Chapter 26.
44.
Mercantile Union Guarantee Corp Ltd v Ball [1937] 2 KB 498; Harnedy v National Greyhound Racing Co Ltd [1944] Ir R 160.
45.
Lewis v Alleyne (1888) 4 TLR 560.
46.
Earle v Peale (1711) 1 Salk 386; 91 ER 336; Ellis v Ellis (1698) 5 Mod 368; 87 ER 711.
47.
Martin v Gale (1876) 4 Ch D 428; Mercantile Credit Ltd v Spinks [1968] QWN 32.
48.
Nottingham Permanent Benefit Building Soc v Thurstan [1903] AC 6. In that case the minor had attained his majority and had not repudiated the contract. Query if the result would have been the same had he been sued while still a minor. See also Horvath v Commonwealth of Australia [1999] 1 VR 643 at 652, 654, 664–5.
49.
For further discussion see Carter, Carter on Contract, §16-140.
50.
Nash v Inman [1908] 2 KB 1 at 8–9; Hamilton v Lethbridge (1912) 14 CLR 236 at 261; Elkington & Co Ltd v Amery [1936] 2 All ER 86 at 88.
51.
Nash v Inman [1908] 2 KB 1 at 11–13; Roberts v Gray [1913] 1 KB 520.
52.
This common law rule has been affected in Victoria by legislation rendering many contracts other than those for necessaries ‘void’. See [15-23].
53.
Bruce v Warwick (1815) 6 Taunt 118; 128 ER 978; Pearce v Kelly (1919) 20 SR (NSW) 88 at 92–3.
54.
See Re Constantinople & Alexandria Hotel Co (Ebbett’s Case) (1870) LR 5 Ch App 302; Norman Baker Pty Ltd v Baker (1978) 3 ACLR 856. Possibly the position was different if the contract remained purely executory: De Garis v Dalgety & Co Ltd [1915] SALR 102 at 143.
55.
NW Ry Co v M’Michael (1850) 5 Ex 114 at 124; 155 ER 49 at 54; Whittingham v Murdy (1889) 60 LT 956.
56.
Davies v Beynon-Harris (1931) 47 TLR 424.
57.
Whittingham v Murdy (1889) 60 LT 956; Scottish Australian Investment Co v Walker (1889) 10 LR (NSW) 32 at 39.
58.
NW Ry Co v M’Michael (1850) 5 Ex 114; 155 ER 49. See also Vickery’s Motors Pty Ltd v Tarrant [1924] VLR 195.
59.
Edwards v Carter [1893] AC 360.
60.
Aroney v Christianus (1915) 15 SR (NSW) 118.
61.
Goode v Harrison (1821) 5 B & Ald 147; 106 ER 1147; Lovell & Christmas v Beauchamp [1894] AC 607 at 611.
62.
Hamilton v Lethbridge (1912) 14 CLR 236 at 256.
63.
Williams v Moor (1843) 11 M & W 256; 152 ER 798; Aroney v Christianus (1915) 15 SR (NSW) 118.
64.
Dublin & Wicklow Ry Co v Black (1852) 8 Ex 181; 155 ER 1310; Carter v Silber [1892] 2 Ch 278 at 284. This is certainly so where the defendant has reached majority when sued. The position is possibly otherwise if he or she is still a minor when sued — see [15-19].
65.
ACT: Mercantile Law Act 1962, s 15; NSW: Usury Bills of Lading and Written Memoranda Act 1902, s 9, repealed by Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970, First Sch; Qld: Statute of Frauds and Limitations Act 1867, s 12, repealed by Statute of Frauds 1972, s 3 (in turn repealed by Property Law Act 1974, s 3(2)).
66.
See De Garis v Dalgety & Co Ltd [1915] SALR 102.
67.
Supreme Court Act 1986 (Vic), s 51. Section 51 replaces Supreme Court Act 1958 (Vic), s 71.
68.
Supreme Court Act 1986 (Vic), s 50, replacing Supreme Court Act 1958 (Vic), s 70. Tasmania had legislation to the same effect as s 70 (Infants’ Relief Act 1875, s 2), but this was repealed by the Minors’ Contracts Act 1988 (Tas).
69.
Query the effect of a fresh promise, at least in the absence of new consideration, to perform a contract which is rendered ‘void’ by the legislation. As to these contracts see [15-23].
70.
Newry & Enniskillen Ry Co v Coombe (1849) 3 Ex 565; 154 ER 970; Steinberg v Scala (Leeds) Ltd [1923] 2 Ch 452.
71.
See [31-04].
72.
NW Ry Co v M’Michael (1850) 5 Ex 114; 155 ER 49; Crick v Murray (1882) 3 LR (NSW) 20. See further A H Hudson (1957) 35 Can Bar Rev 1213.
73.
See, eg Steinberg v Scala (Leeds) Ltd [1923] 2 Ch 452; Curruth v Ern Moro & Amoco Enterprises Pty Ltd (1966) 60 QJP 106. As to the cases dealing with contracts rendered ‘void’ by statute see [1523].
74.
Minors’ Contracts (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1979 (SA), s 7.
75.
Cowern v Nield [1912] 2 KB 419.
76.
See Mason and Carter, Restitution Law in Australia, 1995, para 1020.
77.
See generally Sutton, Sales and Consumer Law in Australia and New Zealand, 4th ed, 1995, pp 113– 8.
78.
See [15-24].
79.
R Leslie Ltd v Sheill [1914] 3 KB 607.
80.
R Leslie Ltd v Sheill [1914] 3 KB 607 at 618.
81.
Supreme Court Act 1986 (Vic), s 49, the basis of which came from the Infants’ Relief Act 1874 (UK).
82.
See Pearce v Brain [1929] 2 KB 310; Woolf v Associated Finance Pty Ltd [1956] VLR 51. For the meaning of ‘total failure of consideration’ see [37-38].
83.
Valentini v Canali (1889) 24 QBD 166. See also Mason and Carter, Restitution Law in Australia, 1995, para 1017.
84.
Stocks v Wilson [1913] 2 KB 235 at 246–7; Hall v Wells [1962] Tas SR 122 at 123–8.
85.
See, eg Jennings v Rundall (1799) 8 TR 335 at 337; 101 ER 1419 at 1421; Re Henderson (1916) 12 Tas LR 40.
86.
Jennings v Rundall (1799) 8 TR 335; 101 ER 1419.
87.
Pollock’s Principles of Contract, 13th ed, 1950, p 63.
88.
Burnard v Haggis (1863) 14 CB (NS) 45; 143 ER 360. See also Ballett v Mingay [1943] 1 KB 281.
89.
Bristow v Eastman (1794) 1 Esp 172; 170 ER 317. But see R Leslie Ltd v Sheill [1914] 3 KB 607 at 621.
90.
See, eg Levene v Brougham (1909) 25 TLR 265; Watson v Campbell (No 2) [1920] VLR 347.
91.
See, eg Liverpool Adelphi Loan Association v Fairhurst (1854) 9 Ex 422; 156 ER 180; R Leslie Ltd v Sheill [1914] 3 KB 607.
92.
Land & Homes (WA) Ltd v Roe (1936) 39 WALR 27 (where the opinion was expressed that possibly the guarantor would be liable if the minor failed, following upon repudiation, to return property which he or she had received under the contract). See also Minister for Education v Oxwell [1966] WAR 39 at 40. Compare Coutts & Co v Browne-Lecky [1947] KB 104.
93.
NSW: Minors (Property and Contracts) Act 1970, s 47; SA: Minors’ Contracts (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1979, s 5; Tas: Minors’ Contracts Act 1988, s 4.
94.
See generally Harland, Law of Minors in Relation to Contracts and Property, 1974.
95.
Report on Infancy in Relation to Contracts and Property, LRC 6, 1969.
96.
Forty-first Report of the Law Reform Committee of South Australia Relating to the Contractual Capacity of Infants, 1977, p 4. See also Law Commission, Law of Contract — Minors’ Contracts, Law Com No 131, 1984; Victorian Chief Justice’s Law Reform Committee, Infancy (No 3), 1970; Law Reform Commission of Tasmania, Report on Contracts and the Disposition of Property by Minors, Report No 48, 1987; Law Reform Commission of Western Australia, Report on Minors’ Contracts (Project No 25, Pt 11) 1988.
97.
See also s 22 (civil act entered into by a minor pursuant to a contractual or other duty binding on him or her is itself presumptively binding on the minor), s 23 (investment made by a minor in certain government securities is presumptively binding), and s 24 (civil act presumptively binding in favour of third parties in certain circumstances).
98.
Compare the position at common law re necessaries — see [15-15].
99.
See [15-06].
100. Section 20(3) provides that ‘save to the extent to which, under Pt 3 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW), or otherwise, a promise may operate as a disposition of property, subsection (2) does not make presumptively binding on a minor a promise by the minor which is the whole or part of the consideration for a disposition of property to the minor’. 101. See [15-24]. 102. Beverley’s Case (1603) 4 Co Rep 123b; 76 ER 1118. 103. Molton v Camroux (1848) 2 Ex 487; 154 ER 584 (affirmed (1849) 4 Ex 17; 154 ER 1107). 104. Molton v Camroux (1849) 4 Ex 17 at 19; 154 ER 1107 at 1108 per Patteson J for the Exchequer Chamber. 105. Boughton v Knight (1873) LR 3 P & D 64 at 72. 106. Imperial Loan Co v Stone [1892] 1 QB 599 at 601 per Lord Esher MR. 107. (1954) 91 CLR 423. 108. (1954) 91 CLR 423 at 437. See also Ford (by his tutor Watkinson) v Perpetual Trustees Victoria Ltd (2009) 75 NSWLR 42 at 57; 257 ALR 658; [2009] NSWCA 186 at [59]. 109. (1954) 91 CLR 423 at 438. 110. Littleton’s Tenures, §405. 111. Molton v Camroux (1848) 2 Ex 487; 154 ER 584 (affirmed (1849) 4 Ex 17; 154 ER 1107); Broughton v Snook [1938] 1 All ER 481; Gibbons v Wright (1954) 91 CLR 423 at 441. 112. [1892] 1 QB 599 at 602–3. See also Gibbons v Wright (1954) 91 CLR 423 at 441. 113. [1892] 1 QB 599 at 603 (approved Gibbons v Wright (1954) 91 CLR 423 at 441); and cf to the same effect Lord Esher MR at 601. 114. Matthews v Baxter (1873) LR 8 Ex 132 (explaining Gore v Gibson (1843) 13 M & W 623; 153 ER 260); Gibbons v Wright (1954) 91 CLR 423 at 441–3, 449. 115. For example, Gore v Gibson (1845) 13 M & W 623 at 627; 153 ER 260 at 262 (somnambulists writing their name in their sleep); Gibbons v Wright (1954) 91 CLR 423 at 443 (lunatics writing their name in a frenzy, unaware of the motions their hands are performing). 116. See [21-12]–[21-20]. 117. Imperial Loan Co v Stone [1892] 1 QB 599 at 601; York Glass Co Ltd v Jubb (1925) 134 LT 36 per Sir Ernest Pollock MR. See also McLaughlin v Daily Telegraph Newspaper Co Ltd (No 2) (1904) 1 CLR 243. 118. See, eg Hart v O’Connor [1985] AC 1000. 119. See Chapter 24. 120. As in Cooks v Clayworth (1811) 18 Ves Jun 12; 34 ER 222; Scates v King (1870) 1 VLR (Eq) 100; Peters v Schimanski [1975] 2 NZLR 328. 121. Howard v Currie (1879) 5 VLR (E) 87; City Bank of Sydney v McLaughlin (1909) 9 CLR 615. 122. Re Rhodes (1890) 44 Ch D 94; McLaughlin v Freehill (1908) 5 CLR 858; Bank of Nova Scotia v Kelly (1973) 41 DLR (3d) 273. The obligation to pay for necessaries is imposed even in systems based on the Roman Law which adopt the subjective rule that mental disability precludes the possibility of consensual obligation: Molyneux v Natal Land and Colonization Co Ltd [1905] AC 555. See also [15-09]–[15-15]; Mason and Carter, Restitution Law in Australia, 1995, paras 831, 832.
123. ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 7; NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 7; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 7; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 5; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s2; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 7; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 7; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 2. 124. In the Estate of Daniel Doull (1881) 7 VLR (IP & M) 70. 125. See generally Ford, Austin and Ramsay, Ford’s Principles of Corporations Law, 12th ed, 2005, Chs 12–15. 126. See the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). 127. See definition of ‘company’ in s 9 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). 128. London Dock Co v Sinnott (1857) 8 El & Bl 347; 120 ER 129. 129. Henry v Sydney MC (1882) 3 NSWLR 264 at 269, 270. 130. Kelner v Baxter (1866) LR 2 CP 174. 131. See Newborne v Sensolid (Great Britain) Ltd [1953] 1 All ER 708; Black v Smallwood (1966) 117 CLR 52. 132. See Kirby v Registrar of Titles [1999] 1 VR 861 at 869 per Mandie J. These associations may be incorporated by registration as companies limited by guarantee under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). Alternatively, a simpler and less expensive means of incorporation is available under the following: ACT: Associations Incorporation Act 1991; NSW: Associations Incorporation Act 2009; NT: Associations Incorporation Act; Qld: Associations Incorporation Act 1981; SA: Associations Incorporation Act 1985; Tas: Associations Incorporation Act 1964; Vic: Associations Incorporation Act 1981; WA: Associations Incorporation Act 1987. 133. Cf Carlton Cricket & Football Social Club v Joseph [1970] VR 487 at 488. 134. Ex parte Goddard; Re Falvey (1946) 46 SR (NSW) 289 at 296; Carlton Cricket & Football Social Club v Joseph [1970] VR 487; Amey v Fifar [1971] 1 NSWLR 685. 135. See also Trustees of the Roman Catholic Church v Ellis (2007) 70 NSWLR 565 at 577; [2007] NSWCA 117 at [50]. 136. [1943] 2 All ER 378. 137. Cf Ex parte Goddard; Re Falvey (1946) 46 SR (NSW) 289; M & M Civil Engineering Pty Ltd v Sunshine Coast Turf Club [1987] 2 Qd R 401; City of Gosnells v Roberts (1994) 12 WAR 437. For discussion see R M Stonham, ‘Clubs — Contractual Liability of Members and Committeemen’ (1943) 17 ALJ 7; K L Fletcher, ‘Unincorporated Associations and Contract’ (1979) 11 UQLJ 53 at 63–4. 138. See Carlton Cricket & Football Social Club v Joseph [1970] VR 487 (no-one was bound by the contract). 139. See, eg Banfield v Wells-Eicke (1964) [1970] VR 81 at 485–6. 140. See generally Robert Baxt, ‘The Dilemma of the Unincorporated Association’ (1973) 47 ALJ 305. 141. See [15-55]. 142. Cf Dennis Rose, ‘The Government and Contract’, in Finn, Essays on Contract, 1987, Ch 9; Seddon, Government Contracts: Federal, State and Local, 3rd ed, 2004. 143. Cth: Judiciary Act 1903, Pts IX and IXA; ACT: Court Procedures Act 2004; NSW: Crown Proceedings Act 1988; NT: Crown Proceedings Act; Qld: Crown Proceedings Act 1980; SA: Crown Proceedings Act 1992; Tas: Crown Proceedings Act 1993; Vic: Crown Proceedings Act 1958; WA: Crown Suits Act 1947; and see eg Commonwealth of Australia v Mewett (1997) 191 CLR 471 at 495– 9, 512–3, 542–52; 146 ALR 299 at 304–7, 317–18, 341–9; see also P W Hogg, ‘Suits against the Commonwealth and the States in the Federal Jurisdiction’ (1970) 44 ALJ 425.
144. See [15-48]–[15-50] in the context of corporations. 145. See, eg Commonwealth v Australian Commonwealth Shipping Board (1926) 39 CLR 1; Hazzell v Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council [1992] AC 1. 146. New South Wales v Bardolph (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 508 per Dixon J and at 496, 502–3, 508, 514; cf Commonwealth v Australian Commonwealth Shipping Board (1926) 39 CLR 1. For recent discussions see Tipperary Developments Pty Ltd v Western Australia (2009) 258 ALR 124; [2009] WASCA 126; Williams v The Commonwealth (2012) 288 ALR 410; [2012] HCA 23. 147. See Williams v The Commonwealth (2012) 288 ALR 410; [2012] HCA 23. See generally Enid Campbell, ‘Commonwealth Contracts’ (1970) 44 ALJ 14, ‘Federal Contract Law’ (1970) 44 ALJ 580, and ‘Agreements about the Exercise of Statutory Powers’ (1971) 45 ALJ 338. 148. New South Wales v Bardolph (1934) 52 CLR 455. See also Commonwealth v Ling (1993) 118 ALR 309 (affirmed on other grounds (1994) 51 FCR 88); Vass v Commonwealth of Australia (2000) 169 ALR 486. 149. Cf The Amphitrite [1921] 3 KB 500; Watson’s Bay and South Shore Ferry Co Ltd v Whitfield (1919) 27 CLR 268; Hughes Aircraft Systems International v Airservices Australia (1997) 146 ALR 1 at 49– 50 per Finn J. 150. See P W Hogg, ‘The Doctrine of Executive Necessity in the Law of Contract’ (1970) 44 ALJ 154 at 159. 151. The Amphitrite [1921] 3 KB 500 at 503. 152. New South Wales v Bardolph (1934) 52 CLR 455. 153. Coogee Esplanade Surf Motel Pty Ltd v Commonwealth (1983) 50 ALR 363; R v Transworld Shipping Ltd (1975) 61 DLR (3d) 304. And cf New South Wales v Bardolph (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 495. 154. New South Wales v Bardolph (1934) 52 CLR 455 at 496, 503, 507. 155. For an illustration, see Official Receiver v Henn (1981) 40 ALR 569. 156. See also Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth) s 125. 157. The current legislation is: ACT: Married Persons’ Property Act 1986, s 3(1); NSW: Married Persons (Equality of Status) Act 1996; NT: Married Persons (Equality of Status) Act 1989; SA: Law of Property Act 1936, ss 92–111; Tas: Married Women’s Property Act 1935; Vic: Marriage Act 1958, Pt VIII. Legislation to the same effect in Queensland (Married Women’s Property Act 1890) and Western Australia (Married Women’s Property Act 1892) has been repealed. 158. See Garcia v National Australia Bank Ltd (1998) 194 CLR 395 at 422; 155 ALR 614 at 634 per Kirby J. 159. See Law Reform Act 1995 (Qld), s 18 (married person has independent legal personality and same capacity as that person would have if unmarried). 160. See, eg Anti-Discrimination Act 1977 (NSW).
[page 336]
Chapter 16
Privity of Contract and Plurality of Parties [16-01] The basic rule. The rule of privity of contract is that only the parties to a contract are legally bound by and entitled to enforce it.1 In Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd2 Barwick CJ said:3 It must be accepted that, according to our law, a person not a party to a contract may not himself sue upon it so as directly to enforce its obligations. For my part, I find no difficulty or embarrassment in this conclusion. Indeed, I would find it odd that a person to whom no promise was made could himself in his own right enforce a promise made to another.
A third party may be benefited or burdened in fact by performance of the contract, but according to the privity doctrine only the contracting parties are benefited and burdened in law by the making of the contract.
The Privity Doctrine [16-02] The impact of the Trident decision. In Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd4 a majority of the High Court of Australia decided that a company which was intended to be benefited by an insurance policy could recover from the insurance company the indemnity promised in the policy, even though it was not a party to the contract of insurance and provided no consideration for it. Three members of the court held that the company could sue directly on the contract. Such an approach would change the doctrine of privity and would probably extend to contracts other than contracts of insurance. However, both the other two members of the majority (who proceeded on different doctrinal bases) and the two dissenting judges disagreed with this approach. In the result the status of the privity doctrine in Australia must be said to be in a state of flux. The impact of the Trident decision will be considered after a discussion of the traditional privity doctrine.5
[page 337]
General [16-03] Historical development of the doctrine. The privity rule was established in 1861 by the decision in Tweedle v Atkinson.6 The rule that consideration must move from the promisee7 is often regarded as being conceptually distinct from the requirement of the privity doctrine that a promise can only be enforced by the promisee. Often a third party beneficiary of a promise will be unable to enforce it on both grounds. In Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd8 Windeyer J explained the issue in this way:9 [O]nly those who are parties to a contract can sue upon it. For us that statement is incontrovertible. But what exactly is meant by it? Is there a useful distinction between denying a right of action to a person because no promise was made to him, and denying a right of action to a person to whom a promise was made because no consideration for it moved from him?
Although it has been argued that the requirements of consideration and privity are just different ways of stating the one rule, the weight of authority supports the existence of two separate though interrelated principles.10 The formula ‘consideration must move from the promisee’ assumes satisfaction of the privity requirement; it is only to the promisee that the requirement of consideration need be applied. [16-04] Illustrations. The privity doctrine has an impact in common situations. First, in a contract of sale between a manufacturer (A) and wholesaler (B), A may include in the contract restrictions about the way B can sell the goods to any retailer C.11 C is not bound by the contract between A and B and the contract between B and C is not enforceable by A. Assume that by the contract with A, B promises A to include in any contracts between B and retailers to whom B sells, undertakings by them. If B does so, but a retailer (C) breaches its undertaking, A cannot sue C because A is not a party to the contract between B and C.12 If B fails to include the undertaking, B has breached the contract with A and is liable to A in damages but the assessment of these will proceed on the footing that if B had included the undertaking, it would not have been enforceable by A. Second, a building contract is enforceable only by the parties to it, for example, owner and builder, and any subcontracts are enforceable only by the parties to them, for example, builder and subcontractor.
[page 338]
‘Exceptions’ to the Privity Doctrine [16-05] Are there true exceptions? Sometimes a third party that is benefited by a contract, but is not a party to that contract may have a remedy against the party who promised to confer the benefit. This is sometimes said to be because the case comes within an exception to the privity doctrine. However, the better analysis is that stated by Deane J in Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd:13 If a third party is to be entitled to rights and subject to obligations in relation to a contract to which he is a stranger, those rights and obligations must have some basis, either in statutory provision or in common law principle, beyond the mere contract … On the other hand, if they arise by reason of the operation of some other principle or some statutory provision, the rule of privity will have nothing to say to them. It is in that context that it would seem accurate to say, as Fullagar J14 and Lord Reid15 have suggested, that there are no true exceptions at common law to the rule of privity.
[16-06] Agency. When an agent enters into a contract for a principal, the principal will be benefited and burdened by that contract. But this is not a qualification of the general privity rule since the agent contracts ‘on behalf of’ the principal. What is clearly exceptional, however, is the agency doctrine of ‘the undisclosed principal’. An undisclosed principal is a person for whom another acts as agent, where that person’s existence and identity is not disclosed to the other contracting party. In Teheran-Europe Co Ltd v S T Belton (Tractors) Ltd,16 Lord Denning MR described the doctrine of the undisclosed principal as an ‘anomaly’ which was ‘justified by business convenience’ and said:17 It is a well-established rule of English law that an undisclosed principal can sue and be sued upon a contract, even though his name and even his existence is undisclosed, save in those cases where the terms of the contract expressly or impliedly confine it to the parties to it.
The agent or the undisclosed principal, but not both, can sue and be sued on the contract. If the agent sues, the damages are for the loss suffered by the agent, on the footing that the agent was principal.18 While a person with appropriate authority from an undisclosed principal can make the latter party to a contract, he or she does not then become a trustee of the contract for the undisclosed principal. The High Court has accepted the possibility, however, that such an agent might contract not ‘as agent’ at all but ‘as trustee’, in which case the undisclosed party will not be liable on the contract.19
[page 339] [16-07] Trusteeship.20 A trustee holds property upon trust for beneficiaries (or ‘cestuis que trust’). The implication of the trust concept for property consisting of contractual rights must now be considered:21 One distinction between agency and trusteeship is that ‘the trustee does not bring his cestuis que trust into any contractual relationship with third parties, while it is the normal function of an agent to do so’.
A trustee contracts as principal for the benefit of a beneficiary. An agent contracts for a principal or principals of which he or she may himself or herself be one. A contracting party may be trustee for a third party of that chose in action which is constituted by the benefit of a contract.22 In such a case, the third party beneficiary, not being a party to the contract, cannot directly exercise the remedies or obtain the relief available to a party, but may compel the trustee to enforce the contract. Where the promisee holds the benefit of the promisor’s promise on trust for the third party beneficiary, the promisee, as trustee, may sue for the loss suffered by the beneficiary. However, as a trustee, the promisee must hold any damages recovered on trust for the beneficiary under the trust. This was the context of Lush LJ’s statement of general principle in Lloyd’s v Harper:23 I consider it to be an established rule of law that where a contract is made with A for the benefit of B, A can sue on the contract for the benefit of B, and recover all that B could have recovered if the contract had been made with B himself.
Enforcement will be for the benefit of the beneficiary. In particular, damages will be assessed by reference to the beneficiary’s loss and will be held on trust for him or her. Whether a contracting party is a trustee is a question of intention. Can the privity doctrine be overcome by making a contracting party the trustee of the contract for the benefit of a third party? In Wilson v Darling Island Stevedoring & Lighterage Co Ltd24 Fullagar J said that it was ‘difficult to understand the reluctance which courts have sometimes shown to infer a trust in such cases’ and more recently this difficulty was shared by at least four members of the High Court in Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd.25 As is shown later,26 one effect of the Trident case is likely to be that Australian judges will in future be more willing than in the past to infer a trust in favour of a third party beneficiary. [16-08] Privity of estate. Property law allows for third parties to be benefited
and burdened by contractually created obligations. The benefit [page 340] and burden of the obligation are sometimes said to be ‘annexed to the land’ and the genesis of this exception to the privity doctrine does indeed lie in the law of real property rather than in that of contract. The assignee of land subject to a lease is benefited by certain covenants which the original lessee gave to the original lessor and the assignee of the lease itself is bound by those covenants. Easements and covenants restrictive of the use of land, if appropriately created, benefit and burden not only the immediate parties to their creation but also their successors in title.27 [16-09] Assignment of contractual rights.28 In many cases a contracting party can effectively assign the benefit of the other party’s outstanding obligation. Assignability of contractual rights, which is usually considered in the context of assignability of ‘choses in action’, embraces ‘rights of a proprietorial or quasiproprietorial nature which are claimable or enforceable by action, such as a right to sue for a debt, or for damages for breach of contract’.29 ‘“Chose in action” is a known legal expression used to describe all personal rights of property which can only be claimed or enforced by action, and not by taking physical possession.’30 Choses in action could generally not be assigned at common law, that is to say, ownership of the chose and the consequential right to sue the debtor could not be transferred to the assignee. However, choses in action were assignable in equity.
The Legal Effects of Contracts for the Benefit of a Third Party [16-10] Generally. A, being indebted to another (C), may make an agreement with B that for good consideration moving from A to B, B promises A that B will pay A’s debt to C. C is not party to the promise (and is not party to the consideration either). If we remove the indebtedness of A to C, it is conceivable that A may wish to benefit C out of charity, friendship, moral obligation or family relationship. The following paragraphs consider the operation of contracts for the benefit of third parties and the possible ways of protecting the interests of
those third parties. [16-11] Performance and variation of contracts which provide for benefits to third parties. Assume that upon the proper construction of a contract A and B are the parties to it; that B promises A that B will pay C; and that A does not hold that promise upon trust for C.31 It is a consequence of the privity doctrine that A and B can, by agreement [page 341] between themselves and without reference to C, vary their contract by reducing the amount of the payment to C or eliminating the provision for that payment entirely.32 But A is not entitled unilaterally to vary the contract by substituting himself or someone else as payee in lieu of C, and B is entitled to insist on paying C in accordance with the original contract.33 (Payments which B has made or will make to C under the contract, although gratuitous as between B and C, vest in C.)34 The position would be different if the contract obliged B to pay C or as A might direct, in that a particular direction given is but a revocable mandate which could be revoked by A, at least before payment was made.35 [16-12] Enforcement and remedies — exclusion of the ‘third party beneficiary’. The privity doctrine insists that a contracting party alone is entitled to exercise any remedies provided by the contract itself, that is: to terminate for breach or repudiation; to sue for damages or specific performance; to choose between rights or remedies; and to choose not to enforce the contract at all. If the promisee obtains an order for specific performance, this will give the third party beneficiary the benefit which he or she contemplated getting from the contract. For example, in Beswick v Beswick36 a man sold his business as a coal merchant to his nephew in consideration of, inter alia, the nephew’s promise to pay, after his uncle’s death, a weekly amount to his aunt (the uncle’s widow) for her life. The aunt was not a party to the agreement. After her husband’s death she brought an action against the nephew. She did so in two capacities: as legal personal representative (in this case, administratrix) of the deceased, and in her
own right. Although it was held that she was not entitled to enforce the contract as third party beneficiary, she was, in her capacity as administratrix, entitled to an order for specific performance of the nephew’s undertaking. Since this had been to pay money to her in her own right, she benefited in fact in her capacity as third party beneficiary. [16-13] Damages. The remedy of damages raises special difficulties and the law is still uncertain. For whose loss or damage is the award made? Does the contracting party hold the award for himself or herself? Assume that by a contract between A and B, B promises A to pay $500 to C. One view has been that A can recover only for A’s own loss or damage, which is basically nothing and so a court would award nominal damages only. At the [page 342] other extreme is the view of the Court of Appeal in Jackson v Horizon Holidays Ltd.37 The court upheld an award of damages for breach of contract to a husband and father against a travel agency, assessed by reference to the loss suffered by all members of his family. Lord Denning MR, drawing on a passage from the judgment of Lush LJ in Lloyd’s v Harper,38 concluded that someone who contracts for the benefit of members of a group is entitled to recover damages for their monetary loss and, where appropriate, for their discomfort, vexation and upset, and will be liable to account to them in due course. This view was disapproved by all members of the House of Lords in Woodar Investment Development Ltd v Wimpey Construction UK Ltd,39 though Lord Scarman (with some support from Lord Salmon and Lord Russell of Killowen) expressed a willingness to reconsider the denial by English law of a third party’s rights if the recommendations of the Law Revision Committee’s 1937 report40 were not implemented soon. Lord Wilberforce thought it ‘a question of great doubt and difficulty’41 whether in the absence of evidence of trusteeship, agency or sustaining of loss by a contracting party, the latter could recover anything except nominal damages and on what principle. Lord Scarman thought that this question required further consideration by the House of Lords. The issues concerning damages were discussed by Windeyer J in Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd.42 His Honour thought that while A might not be able to recover $500 which B had promised A to pay to C, the ordinary
rules for the assessment of damages would, in some cases, give A substantial unliquidated damages which could be more or less than the $500 promised to be paid.43 Windeyer J’s approach towards damages in third party beneficiary contracts was described by Mason CJ and Wilson J as being plainly correct in Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd.44 His Honour gave examples of situations where A was relying on the payment to discharge or reduce an indebtedness to C, or in which C was to use the $500 in a joint venture with A. The damages awarded would be by reference to A’s own loss. This accords with the privity doctrine and means that A’s damages recovered are held by A for A alone. Following this reasoning, A did not hold the contractual rights as agent or trustee for C; why should A hold damages awarded for breach of them as trustee for C? The inadequacy of damages as a remedy for breach of a contract to pay money to a third party suggests that specific performance is an appropriate remedy for such a breach.45 [page 343]
Attempts to Impose Contractual Burdens on Third Parties [16-14] ‘Privity of estate’ applied to personal property. Does ‘privity of estate’46 also qualify the operation of the general doctrine of privity of contract in relation to personal property?47 The question arose in several cases in relation to disputes between the buyer of a ship and its charterer under an existing charterparty (a contract by which a ship or a part thereof is let by the shipowner to another for a specified time or purpose) whose existence and terms were known to the buyer at the time of the purchase.48 The Privy Council in Lord Strathcona Steamship Co Ltd v Dominion Coal Co Ltd49 upheld an injunction obtained by the charterer against such a ‘buyer with notice’ restraining him from using the ship inconsistently with the charterparty. Notwithstanding the attempt of the Privy Council to show otherwise, it seems that the land law’s requirements previously noted are not satisfied in such a case. For example, there is no property of the charterer benefited standing against the ship burdened. The Strathcona case has been considered by Australian courts.50 As a Privy
Council decision it has in the past been accepted as binding. In Shell Oil Co of Australia Ltd v McIlwraith McEacharn Ltd,51 Jordan CJ explained it as depending upon the ‘peculiar value’ of a ship to a charterer, and would have limited recognition of ‘the Strathcona principle’ by reference to the remedy of injunction. Strathcona has been similarly confined in England52 and was not followed in Port Line Ltd v Ben Line Steamers Ltd53 by Diplock J, who held that it was wrongly decided. While some attempts to extend the land law’s restrictive covenant to personal property have succeeded, the courts have consistently rejected attempts to cause contracts to maintain selling prices to be ‘attached’ to the goods so as to force subsequent buyers to act in accordance with the original seller’s wishes.54 [page 344]
Legislation and Suggestions for Reform [16-15] Non-party to instrument taking interest in property. At common law there was a technical rule that a person could not take an immediate interest in property or the benefit of any covenant under a deed which purported to be inter partes unless named as a party in the deed. Section 5 of the Real Property Act 1845 (UK) eliminated this requirement, though the legislation was limited to immediate estates or interests in, and conditions or covenants respecting, real property. In England the section was replaced by s (1) of the Law of Property Act 1925 (UK) which referred to ‘land or other property’ and to a ‘conveyance or other instrument’. ‘Property’ was defined in that Act to include any chose in action. There are equivalent provisions operating in Australia55 of which s 36C of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) is typical: (1) A person may take an immediate or other interest in land or other property, or the benefit of any condition, right of entry, covenant, or agreement over or respecting land or other property, although he may not be named as a party to the assurance or other instrument. (2) Such person may sue, and shall be entitled to all rights and remedies in respect thereof as if he had been named as a party to the assurance or other instrument.
In Beswick v Beswick56 the question of the impact of s 56 of the Law of Property Act 1925 (UK) on the doctrine of privity of contract was considered by the House of Lords. It will be recalled57 that in that case a coal merchant (A) agreed with his nephew (B) to transfer to the latter the goodwill and trade
utensils of his business in consideration of B’s employing him as a consultant at £6.10.0 per week for the rest of his life and after A’s death paying to his widow (C) an annuity charged on the business at the rate of £5 week for her life. C was not a party to the agreement. After A’s death, B paid one sum of £5 to C but declined to pay more. C, having taken out letters of administration in respect of A’s estate, took proceedings both in her capacity as administratrix and also in her personal capacity against B seeking specific performance of the agreement. She was held to be entitled, as administratrix, to an order for specific performance. However, the English Court of Appeal had also held58 that s 56 of the Law of Property Act 1925 entitled her to enforce the contract in her own right as a contract made for her benefit. The House of Lords rejected this proposition, holding that s 56(1) was part of a consolidating Act and was intended merely to reproduce the effect of s 5 of the Real Property Act 1845. [page 345] The precise effect of s 56(1) and of Beswick v Beswick are not clear. An instrument made for the benefit of a third party is not sufficient reason to activate the section. The better view seems to be that the section will be activated by an instrument that purports to contain a grant to or covenant with a third party. The argument that the section appears in a consolidating statute may not be available in respect of its Australian equivalents. However, the provision has been narrowly construed in Australia also.59 [16-16] Recommendations for reform. No one complains about the privity doctrine’s operation to prevent the imposing of a contractual burden on a nonparty. But where a contract purports to benefit a third party it seems unfair that the third party has no rights in respect of variation, termination or enforcement of the contract or in respect of any damages recovered for breach. There have been several official inquiries into the privity doctrine.60 In Australia, the parliaments of Western Australia, Queensland and the Northern Territory have modified the privity rule. The provisions are to be found in s 11 of the Property Law Act 1969 (WA), s 55 of the Property Law Act 1974 (Qld)61 and s 56 of the Law of Property Act 2000 (NT). Although by no means identical, the provisions: entitle the third party beneficiary to enforce the contract;
allow the immediate parties to vary or discharge the contract prior to its being ‘adopted’ (Western Australia) or ‘accepted’ (Queensland and Northern Territory) by the third party beneficiary but not thereafter; protect the defendant in proceedings brought by the third party beneficiary in relation to defences which would have been available if the third party beneficiary had been named as a party to the contract; and subject the third party beneficiary to obligations which the contract purports to impose on him or her. [16-17] Other legislation.Other statutes modify the operation of the privity doctrine in particular contexts. Examples are legislation which imposes liability on manufacturers in favour of consumers,62 legislation providing that compulsory third party motor vehicle insurance shall indemnify non-party drivers63 and, most importantly, legislation providing [page 346] for enforcement of insurance policies by persons other than the proponent and the insurer.64
The Future of the Privity Doctrine in Australia [16-18] The Trident decision. In Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd65 Blue Circle Southern Cement Ltd entered into a contract of insurance with Trident. Then McNiece became Blue Circle’s principal contractor for construction work. The policy covered, among other things, liability to the public for accidents occurring during this construction work and the policy defined ‘the assured’ as including, in addition to Blue Circle, all its contractors and subcontractors. One of McNiece’s workers was seriously injured at the construction site and successfully sued McNiece. McNiece claimed an indemnity under the policy for the amount of the judgment but Trident denied liability. The New South Wales Court of Appeal held66 that McNiece could recover on the ground that at common law a beneficiary under a contract of liability insurance can sue on the policy even though it is not a party to the contract and provides no consideration for it. On appeal to the High Court it was held by a five to two majority that McNiece could recover, but the approaches of the majority differed
to such an extent that there is no majority support for any one approach. The case is important because of its implications generally for the privity doctrine in Australia. However, if the case were run today McNiece could recover from Trident because of s 48 of the Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth).67 [16-19] An action on the contract? Mason CJ and Wilson J, in their joint judgment in Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd,68 noted the criticisms of the common law privity doctrine. They concluded that ‘it is the responsibility of this court to reconsider in appropriate cases common law rules which operate unsatisfactorily and unjustly’69 and that ‘the principled development of the law’ required that McNiece should succeed.70 While their Honours only had to decide whether the old rules continue to apply to a policy of insurance, it seems they would have applied the same approach no matter what sort of third party beneficiary contract had been before them. (They did, however, refer to the likelihood in such cases of insurance as the presence of some degree of reliance, often probably not adequately protected by the doctrine of estoppel, by the third party as a factor which should influence the development of the law.) Mason CJ and Wilson J seem to suggest that they would allow an action by a third party whenever there is a contractual intention to benefit the third party,71 subject to the preservation of the right of the contracting parties to [page 347] vary or rescind the contract (unless the third party had relied on the contract to his or her detriment) and subject also to the availability in an action by the third party of defences against a contracting party. Toohey J also held that McNiece could recover on the policy. While he stated the principle upon which his decision was based in narrow terms confined to certain insurance situations,72 Toohey J recognised that a decision in favour of McNiece would inevitably have implications for privity of contract in other situations73 and it would seem that his approach is similar to that of Mason CJ and Wilson J.74 [16-20] Revival of the trust device? Deane J in Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd75 did not decide that in a situation such as this the third party has a direct right of action on the contract. He considered that criticism of the privity doctrine has often been flawed by an incomplete perception of the extent to which its practical effect is confined and qualified by
the application of other principles.76 In some cases injustice could be avoided by the application of the principles of estoppel or unjust enrichment (but these had not been relied upon in this case). Deane J, agreeing with an earlier comment of Fullagar J,77 found it difficult to understand the reluctance which courts have often shown to infer a trust in third party beneficiary cases and considered that this had often been caused by a failure to appreciate the flexibility of the law of trusts.78 He considered that the requisite intention to create a trust should be inferred if: it clearly appears that it was the intention of the promisee that the third party should be entitled to insist upon performance of the promise and receipt of the benefit; and if trust is, in the circumstances, the appropriate legal mechanism for giving effect to that intention.79
In Deane J’s view the prima facie effect of the policy here was to create a trust for McNiece and it was difficult to conceive of circumstances which [page 348] would change that conclusion. However, as the case had not been argued on the basis of a trust, McNiece should be given leave to join Blue Circle in the proceedings and Trident should be allowed, if it could, to give the court evidence showing that there were circumstances precluding or modifying the trust which the policy would otherwise have created. [16-21] Unjust enrichment? Justice Gaudron was the final member of the court in Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd80 who would allow McNiece to succeed. She relied on a principle of unjust enrichment.81 Her Honour held that a promisor who has accepted an agreed consideration for a promise to benefit a third party is unjustly enriched if the promise is unfulfilled and the non-fulfilment does not attract appropriate legal consequences. The right of the third party to sue is not a right to sue on the contract, but rather a right independent of, but ordinarily corresponding in content and duration with, the obligation owed under the contract by the promisor to the promisee.82 [16-22] The dissenting judgments in Trident. Brennan and Dawson JJ considered in Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd83 that this was not an appropriate situation for the High Court to overturn wellestablished doctrine. The Court of Appeal had held that an exception to the privity doctrine existed in respect of liability insurance contracts, but neither Brennan nor Dawson JJ could see any conceptual basis on which such contracts
should be treated differently from other types of contract. Both thought that the path of future development to avoid any injustice caused by the doctrine lay in the further development of other principles such as those relating to the law of trusts, estoppel and damages. [16-23] The future of the privity doctrine. It is still unclear how the privity doctrine will develop in Australia following the decision of the High Court in Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd.84 It may be that when the issue again comes before the High Court a majority will be prepared, where a contract shows a clear intention to benefit a third party, to hold that at common law the third party may sue on the contract. If this step is taken, it is difficult to see the right to sue being restricted to situations involving insurance policies. At the very least it seems that courts will be much more willing than in the past to find an intention to create a trust in favour of the third party. (As we saw earlier,85 Deane J’s judgment centred on this point, but it was also made by Mason CJ and Wilson J and by Toohey J.)86 It is also likely that there will be further development of the law relating to the measure of damages, to estoppel, and perhaps also to [page 349] unjust enrichment, to minimise any risk of injustice. It may also be that the courts may in some situations feel less pressure than would otherwise be the case to grant a tort remedy in negligence to a person suffering economic loss as a result of a breach of a contract to which that person was not a party.87 The general law will still be relevant even in jurisdictions such as Queensland, Northern Territory and Western Australia which have legislated so as to grant a right of action to the third party beneficiary. This is because where the statute is not applicable, due to, for example, the beneficiary not accepting within a reasonable time as required by the Property Law Act 1974 (Qld), s 5588 (and Law of Property Act 2000 (NT), s 56) it may be that the beneficiary will still be entitled, for example, under a trust arising under the general law.89 Where a third party beneficiary may in principle be entitled to sue, it will sometimes be difficult to decide whether a particular person was intended to benefit directly under the contract or was merely one who would benefit in some way if it is performed. The latter ‘incidental beneficiary’ will not be able to enforce the contract, and this would seem to be the case whether the action is
brought under an expanded common law rule or under legislation. So where an injured employee sued an insurance company with whom his employer held a policy, it was held, distinguishing Trident, that the words of the policy promised indemnity only to the employer and not to the employee, and that as a consequence the action must fail.90
The Special Case of Third Parties and the Benefit of Exclusion Clauses91 [16-24] ‘Vicarious immunity’. Bills of lading attempt to exclude or limit liability in respect of the cargo, not only of the immediate issuer of the bill (shipowner or carrier), but of other persons involved in their carriage as well. Is such a non-issuer entitled to the protection of such an exclusion clause? The non-issuer seeks not to enforce a promise but to take the benefit of a defence. In Elder Dempster & Co v Paterson Zochonis & Co92 a bill issued by a carrier which purported to protect ‘the shipowners’ as well as the charterer was held by all members of the House of Lords to be effective for that purpose. Viscount Cave said, ‘It may be that the owners were not directly parties to the contract; but they took possession of the goods … on behalf of and as the agents of the charterers, and so can claim [page 350] the same protection as their principals’.93 This may be called a principle of ‘vicarious immunity’.94 In Cosgrove v Horsfall95 and Adler v Dickson96 injured passengers suing employees of the carrier were met with defences based on exclusion clauses in the agreement between plaintiff and carrier. In Cosgrove v Horsfall a free bus pass issued to Cosgrove by a transport authority stipulated that neither it nor its servants should be liable to him for injury. The Court of Appeal held that the defendant bus driver Horsfall could not rely on the agreement because he was not a party to it. In Adler v Dickson, Mrs Adler, while a passenger on the P & O Steamship, Himalaya, was injured, allegedly as a result of the negligence of the master and boatswain whom she sued. Conditions on her ticket exempted the company from liability including liability in respect of injury occasioned by
negligence of the company’s servants. All three members of the Court of Appeal agreed that the conditions did not, expressly or by implication, deprive the plaintiff of the right to sue the servants. Denning LJ thought that Elder Dempster allowed protection to stevedores and others because ‘although they were not parties to the contract nevertheless they participated in the performance of it, and the exception clause was [by necessary implication] made for their benefit whilst they were so performing it’.97 Jenkins and Morris LJJ, while noting that the ticket did not purport to protect the company’s servants, thought that even if it had done so, the privity doctrine would have prevented them from relying on it. In Wilson v Darling Island Stevedoring & Lighterage Co Ltd,98 the High Court by a three to two majority held that an exclusion clause in a bill of lading which purported to protect ‘the Carrier or his Agents or servants’ did not protect a stevedore which was the agent of the issuer (in this case the carrier which issued the bill was the shipowner) because the stevedore could not sue or be sued on a contract to which it was not a party.99 [16-25] Use of agency principle. The privity rule was applied by the House of Lords in Scruttons Ltd v Midland Silicones Ltd100 to deny the protection of an exclusion clause in a bill of lading to a stevedore. The bill was signed on behalf of the shipowner and provided for a monetary cap on the liability of the ‘carrier’ which was defined in standard form to include ‘the owner or the charterer who enters into a contract of carriage with a shipper’.101 [page 351] Lord Morris observed102 that there is no difference in principle between A’s promises to B (in each case for good consideration) that A will make a gift to C and that A will not claim from C that which C ought to pay to A. The House held that the term ‘carrier’ did not include the stevedores, that the bill did not, expressly or by implication, purport to extend the benefit of the limitation on liability provision to stevedores, and that the carrier did not contract as agent for the stevedores. But Lord Reid held out some hope for the agency argument in a different factual context:103 I can see a possibility of success of the agency argument if (first) the bill of lading makes it clear that the stevedore is intended to be protected by the provisions in it which limit liability, (secondly) the bill of lading makes it clear that the carrier, in addition to contracting for these provisions on his own
behalf, is also contracting as agent for the stevedore that these provisions should apply to the stevedore, (thirdly) the carrier has authority from the stevedore to do that, or perhaps later ratification by the stevedore would suffice, (fourthly) that any difficulties about consideration moving from the stevedore were overcome.
[16-26] Problem of consideration.The question before the Privy Council in New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v A M Satterthwaite & Co Ltd (The Eurymedon)104 was whether the bill of lading in question (which was in a form in use prior to Scruttons Ltd v Midland Silicones Ltd105 and had not been drawn in the light of that case) satisfied Lord Reid’s requirements.106 The bill of lading issued by the carrier to the consignor-manufacturer of an expensive drilling machine was for its shipment from Liverpool to Wellington in New Zealand. The machine was damaged, allegedly as a result of the negligence of the stevedore (‘New Zealand Shipping’) at a time by which the consignee (Satterthwaite) had become the holder of the bill and bound by its terms as owner of the goods.107 Importantly, for several years, the stevedore had carried out all the stevedoring work in Wellington in respect of the carrier’s ships; the carrier was a wholly owned subsidiary of the stevedore; and the stevedore generally acted as the carrier’s agent in New Zealand. The bill provided as follows: It is hereby expressly agreed that no servant or agent of the carrier (including every independent contractor from time to time employed by the carrier) shall in any circumstances whatsoever be under any liability whatsoever to the shipper, consignee or owner of the goods or to any holder of this bill of lading for any loss or damage or delay of whatsoever kind arising or resulting directly or indirectly from any act, neglect or default on his part while acting in the course of or in connection with his employment and, without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing provisions in this clause, every
[page 352] exemption, limitation, condition and liberty herein contained and every right, exemption from liability, defence and immunity of whatsoever nature applicable to the carrier or to which the carrier is entitled hereunder shall also be available and shall extend to protect every such servant or agent of the carrier acting as aforesaid and for the purpose of all the foregoing provisions of this clause the carrier is or shall be deemed to be acting as agent or trustee on behalf of and for the benefit of all persons who are or might be his servants or agents from time to time (including independent contractors as aforesaid) and all such persons shall to this extent be or be deemed to be parties to the contract in or evidenced by this bill of lading.
The bill incorporated the Hague Rules scheduled to the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1924 (UK), with the result that the carrier and the ship were discharged from all liability in respect of cargo damage unless suit was brought against them within one year after delivery. Was the stevedore also entitled to the benefit of
this time bar clause? The bill clearly purported to protect the stevedore but was the stevedore a contracting party? Lord Wilberforce, speaking for the majority, analysed the transaction as follows:108 [T]he bill of lading brought into existence a bargain initially unilateral but capable of becoming mutual, between the shipper and the appellant [stevedore], made through the carrier as agent. This became a full contract when the appellant performed services by discharging the goods. The performance of these services for the benefit of the shipper was the consideration for the agreement by the shipper that the appellant should have the benefit of the exemptions and limitations contained in the bill of lading.
Viscount Dilhorne and Lord Simon of Glaisdale dissented but accepted that a third party could be protected by a clause appropriately framed. In view of the close association between the stevedore and the carrier in The Eurymedon, it could not be suggested that the stevedore, when commencing to provide services, did not know of the bill of lading or of its terms. Analysis in terms either of acceptance by its act of the shipper’s offer to exempt, or of the exchange of that act for a promise by the shipper,109 sits comfortably with this fact. The question of whether the stevedore had supplied consideration was discussed earlier.110 The High Court and the Privy Council, following The Eurymedon, held a stevedore entitled to the benefit of a time bar clause in the bill of lading issued by the charterer in Port Jackson Stevedoring Pty Ltd v Salmond & Spraggon (Aust) Pty Ltd (The New York Star).111 Thirty-seven cartons of razor blades had been shipped on the New York Star from Canada to Sydney, where the stevedore unloaded them and stored them in its wharfside shed, from which 33 cartons were stolen. The shipment was covered by a bill of lading issued by the charterer to, and accepted by, the consignor, and transmitted to and accepted by the plaintiff consignee by the time of the loss. Clause 2 of the bill was identical to the clause in The Eurymedon quoted above (which has come to be called the [page 353] ‘Himalaya clause’ after the name of the ship in Adler v Dickson)112 and as in that case there was a one year time bar provision. Further, as in that case, the stevedore had for years acted as stevedore in the discharge of the carrier’s ships
in the port of discharge. It knew the contents (including the Himalaya clause) of the carrier’s form of bill of lading for shipments to Australia. There were two principal issues: was the stevedore entitled to such protection as the time bar clause offered? And, if so, did that clause cover the facts? Only the former need be discussed here. The High Court by a three to two majority answered it ‘yes’. The Himalaya clause clearly satisfied the first and second of Lord Reid’s requirements, and according to their Honours forming the majority on the first issue, Barwick CJ, Mason and Jacobs JJ, the facts supported an inference of fact that the carrier had contracted with the stevedore’s authority. In relation to Lord Reid’s fourth condition, Mason and Jacobs JJ thought that the relevant provisions of the bill constituted an offer capable of acceptance and that when the stevedore, knowing of it and of its conditions, performed its conditions by unloading, it accepted that offer and provided the consideration for it.113 By contrast, Barwick CJ thought that the provisions constituted from the beginning an agreement with the stevedore as distinct from an offer to it, for which the stevedore gave consideration by unloading. His Honour said:114 I can see no validity in a suggestion that the bill of lading could not at the one time contain a contract of carriage between the consignor and carrier and an arrangement between consignor and stevedore, made through the agency of the carrier, to regulate the relationship of consignor and stevedore, when the stevedoring work was undertaken.
He described115 the arrangement as ‘a compact with agreed conditions to attend the performance of certain acts, which are not promised to be done’ whose essential characteristic is ‘to provide an agreed consequence to future action should that action take place: to attach conditions to a relationship arising from conduct’. On this approach ‘the performance of the contemplated act both supplies the occasion for those conditions to operate and the consideration which makes the arrangement contractual’.116 The Privy Council found Barwick CJ’s analysis to be ‘in substantial agreement with and indeed to constitute a powerful reinforcement of one of the two possible bases put forward in the Board’s judgment’117 in The Eurymedon for holding the stevedore entitled to the benefit of the exemption clause. Since the stevedore is, on either the reasoning of Barwick CJ or that of Mason and Jacobs JJ, a principal contracting party, questions as to how far a third party beneficiary under a contract can enforce that contract do not arise. [page 354]
In The Mahkutai,118 the Privy Council approved the bilateral contract approach taken in The Eurymedon and The New York Star and indicated that it might even take the approach further.119 As the case dealt with a jurisdiction clause rather than an exemption clause the Privy Council did not think it appropriate to do so in that case. [16-27] Application to other contracts. Subsequent Australian cases have held that the principles enunciated in New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v A M Satterthwaite & Co Ltd (The Eurymedon)120 and Port Jackson Stevedoring Pty Ltd v Salmond & Spraggon (Aust) Pty Ltd (The New York Star)121 apply to carriage of goods by road as well as by sea and to other exemption clauses as well as to time bar clauses. Also, ratification, one of the two alternative limbs of Lord Reid’s third condition in Midland Silicones, may take the form of the third party’s pleading the exemption clause.122 In Celthene Pty Ltd v WKJ Hauliers Pty Ltd,123 Yeldham J in the Supreme Court of New South Wales held that consideration had been supplied by a driver of a subcontractor (the subcontractor and its driver were both sued) notwithstanding that at the time of performance he had not known of the existence of the clause.124 In Life Savers (Australasia) Ltd v Frigmobile Pty Ltd125 there was no established business connection between the carrier and its subcontractor as there had been in The Eurymedon and The New York Star, but the subcontractor had accepted delivery of the consignment of chocolate from the plaintiff/consignor on an invoice of the carrier’s signed by the subcontractor’s driver and by the consignor. The case was treated by the New South Wales Court of Appeal as one of an offer by the consignor of the immunity to the subcontractor direct if he would carry the goods and of acceptance of the offer by the acceptance of the goods on that basis. These two New South Wales cases suggest that many third party beneficiaries of exclusion clauses will have little difficulty in meeting Lord Reid’s third and fourth conditions.126 Hutley JA’s observation in the Life Savers case seems most apposite: ‘The form of contract here used, [page 355] patterned on provisions in favour of stevedores and other subcontractors in bills of lading, strains doctrines of privity of contract and consideration but these difficulties have been overcome’.127
If in future Australian law is to permit a third party intended to be benefited by a contract a direct right of action on the contract128 there would seem no obvious reason why this approach should not also apply to the benefit of exclusion clauses.129 If so, the intricate analysis raised by The Eurymedon and The New York Star could be sidestepped.
Plurality of Parties [16-28] Co-promisors and co-promisees. Promises might be given by or to two or more persons, such as a promise by A and B (co-promisors) to C, or by A alone to B and C (co-promisees). Difficult questions of construction may arise as to the nature of a promise made by co-promisors and of one made to copromisees. There is also a series of rules as to various other matters, for example: the effect of the death of a co-promisor or co-promisee; the effect of a release in favour of one co-promisor; or a release by one co-promisee. A discussion of these rules may be found elsewhere.130 All that is attempted here is to describe in general terms the types of promises which may be encountered. [16-29] Co-promisors. A distinction is made between ‘joint’, ‘joint and several’ and ‘several’ promisors. A joint promise is of the form ‘A and B together promise C to pay C $1000’. A joint and several promise is of the form ‘A and B together promise C, and A separately promises C, and B separately promises C, to pay C $1000’, the promise by A and B together being the joint promise and the two separate promises, one by A and the other by B, being the several promises. Joint promises and joint and several promises are alike in that only one performance is promised (‘to pay C $1000’) and once the promisee (C) receives payment C no longer has a cause of action. By contrast, purely several promises are cumulative and in terms of the illustration would have had A and B each promising $1000, that is, $2000 in all. A joint promise by two or more persons creates a single obligation incumbent upon both or all. The theory of a joint and several obligation is
[page 356] that it creates both a joint obligation incumbent upon all and a number of several obligations respectively incumbent upon each one; but the several obligations are non-cumulative, so that (as with purely joint liability) performance by any one will discharge all.131 The common law presumption is that a promise by two or more is made jointly but the question is one of intention and in some cases is affected by legislation. [16-30] Co-promisees. Promises to co-promisees may take the form of: a promise to co-promisees jointly is of the form ‘A promises B and C together to pay X $1000’; or a promise to them jointly and severally is of the form ‘A promises B and C together and A promises B separately and A promises C separately to pay X $1000’. As noted above,132 purely several promises are cumulative and just as this was illustrated there by promises by A and B each to pay C $1000, so it can be illustrated here by A’s promise to B to pay B $1000 and A’s promise to C to pay C $1000, two promises which oblige A to pay $2000 in all ($1000 to B and $1000 to C). It can also be illustrated by A’s promise to B to pay X $1000 and A’s separate promise to C to pay X $1000, two separate promises which also oblige A to pay $2000 in all (the whole $2000 to X). The present concern is not with such purely separate and cumulative promises. The position of co-promisees is more complex than that of co-promisors. Copromisee questions, like co-promisor questions, are logically distinct from questions as to the content of the promise. But the existence and extent of the interests of the co-promisees in the subject matter of the contract and in performance of the promise can influence a decision as to whether the promise is to the co-promisees jointly, jointly and severally, or severally. The law seeks to give effect to the parties’ intention as expressed. Where co-promisees have no beneficial interest in the contract’s subject matter or performance, a promise is seen to be made to them jointly. [16-31] Co-promisees: consideration moving from one. It seems to have been accepted in Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd133 that where consideration is furnished by one joint promisee, the promise is enforceable by all the joint promisees: from the promisor’s perspective, the consideration has
been furnished by all. By contrast, consideration must move from each several promisee.134 1.
See Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v Selfridge & Co Ltd [1915] AC 847; Wilson v Darling Island Stevedoring & Lighterage Co Ltd (1956) 95 CLR 43 at 66, 67, 80.
2.
(1967) 119 CLR 460.
3.
(1967) 119 CLR 460 at 478. See also Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v Selfridge & Co Ltd [1915] AC 847 at 853.
4.
(1988) 165 CLR 107.
5.
See [16-18]–[16-23].
6.
(1861) 1 B & S 393; 121 ER 762.
7.
See [6-19]–[6-22].
8.
(1967) 119 CLR 460.
9.
(1967) 119 CLR 460 at 494.
10.
Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd (1988) 165 CLR 107 at 115–16 per Mason CJ and Wilson J and at 164 per Toohey J.
11.
Arrangements of the kind described in this paragraph are now prohibited by Pt IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth).
12.
Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v Selfridge & Co Ltd [1915] AC 847.
13.
(1988) 165 CLR 107 at 143; see also at 134–5 per Brennan J.
14.
Wilson v Darling Island Stevedoring & Lighterage Co Ltd (1956) 95 CLR 43 at 67.
15.
Scruttons Ltd v Midland Silicones Ltd [1962] AC 446 at 473.
16.
[1968] 2 QB 545. See also Siu Yin Kwan v Eastern Insurance Co Ltd [1994] 1 All ER 213.
17.
[1968] 2 QB 545 at 552. Sachs LJ seems to have agreed with Lord Denning’s formulation: at 561. On the doctrine of the undisclosed principal generally, see Reynolds, Bowstead and Reynolds on Agency, 18th ed, 2006, pp 372–89.
18.
Allen v F O’Hearn & Co [1937] AC 213 at 218.
19.
Construction Engineering (Aust) Pty Ltd v Hexyl Pty Ltd (1985) 155 CLR 541; 58 ALR 411.
20.
See M P Furmston, and J W Carter, ‘Indemnities for the Benefit of Others’ (2011) 27 JCL 82.
21.
Construction Engineering (Aust) Pty Ltd v Hexyl Pty Ltd (1985) 155 CLR 541 at 546.
22.
See, eg Les Affréteurs Réunis SA v Walford Ltd [1919] AC 801; Wilson v Darling Island Stevedoring & Lighterage Co Ltd (1956) 95 CLR 43.
23.
(1880) 16 Ch D 290 at 321.
24.
(1956) 95 CLR 43 at 67.
25.
(1988) 165 CLR 107 at 120 (per Mason CJ and Wilson J), 146–7 (per Deane J) and 166 (per Toohey J).
26.
See [16-20], [16-23].
27.
On the subject generally, see Bradbrook and Neave, Easements and Restrictive Covenants in Australia, 1981.
28.
See Chapter 17.
29.
Starke, Assignments of Choses in Action in Australia, 1972, p 1.
30.
Torkington v Magee [1902] 2 KB 427 at 430 per Channell J.
31.
And that, despite some of the judgments in Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd (1988) 165 CLR 107, C has no action against B on the contract: see [16-18]–[16-23].
32.
See, eg Cleaver v Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association [1892] 1 QB 147; Re Sinclair’s Life Policy [1938] Ch 799. These cases all involved insurance policies, as to which special statutory provisions now apply: see [16-17].
33.
Re Schebsman [1944] Ch 83; Cathels v CSD (1959) 79 WN (NSW) 271.
34.
Re Schebsman [1944] Ch 83; Cathels v CSD (1959) 79 WN (NSW) 271.
35.
Re Stapleton-Bretherton [1941] Ch 482; Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd (1967) 119 CLR 460.
36.
[1968] AC 58 (see [16-15]). See also Dome Resources NL v Silver (2008) 72 NSWLR 693 at 708; [2008] NSWCA 322 at [54].
37.
[1975] 3 All ER 92.
38.
(1880) 16 Ch D 290 at 321.
39.
[1980] 1 All ER 571.
40.
Cmd 5449, 1937. There has been more recent reform following Law Commission Report, Privity of Contract: Contracts for the Benefit of 3rd Parties, Law Com No 242, 1996, which led to the enactment of Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999. See [16-16].
41.
[1980] 1 All ER 571 at 577. Lord Salmon agreed with him (at 583). For discussion of special cases where substantial damages may be recovered, see Carter, Carter on Contract, § 17-170.
42.
(1967) 119 CLR 460 at 501–2.
43.
And see Lord Upjohn in Beswick v Beswick [1968] AC 58 at 101 to the same effect.
44.
(1988) 165 CLR 107 at 119. See also at 158 per Dawson J.
45.
Cf Beswick v Beswick [1968] AC 58 at 89, 101–2; Coulls v Bagot’s Executor & Trustee Co Ltd (1967) 119 CLR 460 at 503; Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd (1988) 165 CLR 107 at 119–20. And see [39-06].
46.
See [16-08].
47.
See further Carter, Carter on Contract, §17-070.
48.
Cf DeMattos v Gibson (1858) 4 De G & J 276; 45 ER 108; Lord Strathcona Steamship Co Ltd v Dominion Coal Co Ltd [1926] AC 108.
49.
[1926] AC 108.
50.
See Shell Oil Co of Australia Ltd v Mcllwraith McEacharn Ltd (1945) 45 SR (NSW) 144 at 150 per Jordan CJ; Howie v NSW Lawn Tennis Ground Ltd (1956) 95 CLR 132 at 156 per Dixon CJ, McTiernan and Fullagar JJ.
51.
(1945) 45 SR (NSW) 144.
52.
Clore v Theatrical Properties Ltd [1936] 3 All ER 483; Law Debenture Trust Corp Plc v Ural Caspian Oil Corp Ltd [1993] 2 All ER 355 (reversed on other grounds [1995] Ch 152).
53.
[1958] 2 QB 146.
54.
McGruther v Pitcher [1904] 2 Ch 306; National Phonograph Co of Australia v Menck (1908) 7 CLR
481 at 516–17 per Griffith CJ (and on appeal (1911) 12 CLR 15 at 22). The practice of resale price maintenance is now prohibited by the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), s 48. 55.
ACT: Civil Law (Property) Act 2006; NSW: Conveyancing Act 1919, s 36C; NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 12 (omits or ‘other property’); Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 13 (but note this omits ‘or other property’); SA: Law of Property Act 1936, s 34(1); Tas: Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 2000, s 61 and Powers of Attorney Act 1934, s 9; Vic: Property Law Act 1958, s 56(1); WA: Property Law Act 1969, s 11(1).
56.
[1968] AC 58.
57.
See [16-12].
58.
[1966] Ch 538.
59.
See Concrete Constructions Pty Ltd v GIO of NSW [1966] 2 NSWR 609; Sacher Investments Pty Ltd v Forma Stereo Consultants Pty Ltd [1976] 1 NSWLR 5 at 12.
60.
See the Sixth Interim Report of the English Law Revision Committee, Cmd 5449, 1937, paras 41–9; Law Commission Report, Privity of Contract: Contracts for the Benefit of 3rd Parties, Law Com No 242, 1996, which led to the enactment of Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 (UK). For a discussion of the legislation see generally Merkin, ed, Privity of Contract, 2000. See also Report of the New Zealand Contracts and Commercial Law Reform Committee (whose draft bill was enacted in practically identical form in the Contracts (Privity) Act 1982 (NZ)).
61.
And see New Zealand’s Contracts (Privity) Act 1982. See A Rogers, ‘Contract and Third Parties’ in Finn, ed, Essays on Contract, 1987, p 81; Louise Wilson, ‘Contract and Benefits for Third Parties’ (1987) 11 Syd LR 230.
62.
For example, Australian Consumer Law, Pt 5-4, Div 2 (action for damages against manufacturers of goods).
63.
For example, Motor Vehicles (Third Party Insurance) Act 1942 (NSW), s 10(7).
64.
Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth), ss 48, 48A, 49, 51.
65.
(1988) 165 CLR 107; see Peter Kincaid, ‘The Trident Insurance Case: Death of Contract?’ (1989) 2 JCL 160.
66.
(1987) 8 NSWLR 270.
67.
See [16-17].
68.
(1988) 165 CLR 107.
69.
(1988) 165 CLR 107 at 123.
70.
(1988) 165 CLR 107 at 124.
71.
They semble would not go further and require, as does the Property Law Act 1974 (Qld) s 55 and Law of Property Act 2000 (NT), s 56 (see [16-15]), an indication of intention that the third party should be able to sue on the contract: see at 123. For a comparison of the Queensland Act with the general law following the Trident case see C A C MacDonald, ‘The High Court, Contract and Remedies’ (1989) 5 QUTLJ 35.
72.
(1988) 165 CLR 107 at 172.
73.
(1988) 165 CLR 107 at 163.
74.
See also Barroora Pty Ltd v Provincial Insurance Ltd (1992) 26 NSWLR 170. In Cooperative Bulk Handling Ltd v Jennings Industries Ltd (1996) 17 WAR 257 the Full Supreme Court of Western Australia held that Trident was not limited to ‘liability’ insurance. Nor was there an inference that only those persons who were intended to be insured under the contract and who acted on such assumption and suffered detriment were entitled to the benefit of the exception. See also WA
Woodside Petroleum Development Pty Ltd v H & R E-W Pty Ltd (1997) 18 WAR 539; and on appeal (1999) 20 WAR 380. 75.
(1988) 165 CLR 107.
76.
(1988) 165 CLR 107 at 144.
77.
In Wilson v Darling Island Stevedoring & Lighterage Co Ltd (1956) 95 CLR 43 at 67.
78.
(1988) 165 CLR 107 at 146–7.
79.
(1988) 165 CLR 107 at 147. Mason CJ and Wilson J (at 121) seemed to think it was the intention of both parties that was relevant.
80.
(1988) 165 CLR 107.
81.
As to unjust enrichment generally see Chapter 38.
82.
See also (1988) 165 CLR 107 at 145–6, where Deane J considered that in some circumstances an action founded on unjust enrichment might perhaps be available to the third party, but he did not find it necessary to pursue this question.
83.
(1988) 165 CLR 107.
84.
(1988) 165 CLR 107.
85.
See [16-20].
86.
(1988) 165 CLR 107 at 120–1, 166. See also Bahr v Nicolay (No 2) (1988) 164 CLR 604 at 618–19 per Mason CJ and Dawson J.
87.
See, eg White v Jones [1995] 2 AC 207; Hill v Van Erp (1997) 188 CLR 159; D Beyleveld and R Brownsword, ‘Privity, Transitivity and Rationality’ (1991) 54 MLR 48.
88.
See Re Davies [1989] 1 Qd R 48.
89.
See D A Butler, ‘Privity of Contract in Queensland’ (1990) 10 QL 147. The Property Law Act 1974 (Qld), s 55(7) (and Law of Property Act 2000 (NT), s 56(7)) expressly preserves rights or remedies arising apart from that provision.
90.
Visic v State Government Insurance Commission (1990) 3 WAR 122.
91.
The expression ‘exclusion clause’ is used to comprehend exclusion, exemption, exception and limitation (both time limitation and monetary limitation) clauses.
92.
[1924] AC 522.
93.
[1924] AC 522 at 534.
94.
Cf Coote, Exception Clauses, 1964, pp 119ff.
95.
(1945) 62 TLR 140.
96.
[1955] 1 QB 158.
97.
[1955] 1 QB 158 at 182–3.
98.
(1956) 95 CLR 43.
99.
Various possible grounds for distinguishing Elder Dempster were suggested, particularly by Fullagar J.
100. [1962] AC 446. 101. The bill was expressly made subject to the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1936 (US) whereby the US adopted the Hague Rules with certain variations and the definition of ‘carrier’ was contained in s 1(a) of the Act.
102. [1962] AC 446 at 494. 103. [1962] AC 446 at 474. 104. [1975] AC 154. 105. [1962] AC 446. 106. [1975] AC 154 at 166 per Lord Wilberforce for the majority. 107. Sometimes by accepting a bill of lading and asking for delivery of the goods, a consignee becomes entitled to the benefit of, and bound by, the bill’s terms vis-à-vis the carrier: Brandt v Liverpool Brazil and River Plate Steam Navigation Co Ltd [1924] 1 KB 575; The Aramis [1989] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 213. There is legislation dealing with this in most Australian jurisdictions: see Carriage of Goods By Sea Act 1991 (Cth); Sea-Carriage Documents Act 1997 (NSW). 108. [1975] AC 154 at 167–8. 109. Cf [1975] AC 154 at 168 per Lord Wilberforce. 110. See [6-49]. 111. (1978) 139 CLR 231 (HC); (1980) 144 CLR 300 (PC). 112. [1955] 1 QB 158 (see [16-24]). 113. Citing R v Clarke (1927) 40 CLR 227 at 244 per Starke J. 114. (1968) 139 CLR 231 at 243 (emphasis supplied). 115. (1968) 139 CLR 231 at 244. 116. (1968) 139 CLR 231 at 244. 117. (1980) 144 CLR 300 at 305. 118. [1996] AC 650; see Catherine MacMillan [1997] LMCLQ 1. 119. ‘[T]he time may well come when, in an appropriate case, it will fall to be considered whether the courts should take what may legitimately be perceived to be the final, and inevitable, step in this development, and recognise in these cases, a fully fledged exception to the doctrine of privity of contract, thus escaping from all the technicalities which the courts are now faced in English law’: [1996] AC 650 at 664 per Lord Goff. 120. [1975] AC 154. 121. (1978) 139 CLR 231 (HC); (1980) 144 CLR 300 (PC). 122. Celthene Pty Ltd v WKJ Hauliers Pty Ltd [1981] 1 NSWLR 606; Life Savers (Australasia) Ltd v Frigmobile Pty Ltd [1983] 1 NSWLR 431. But compare the comments of Kirby P and Handley JA in Carrington Slipways Pty Ltd v Patrick Operations Pty Ltd (1991) 24 NSWLR 745 and see D Malcolm, ‘The Negligent Pilot and the Himalaya Clause: a Saga of Disagreement’ (1993) 67 ALJ 14. 123. [1981] 1 NSWLR 606. 124. It is difficult to support the holding that consideration could be furnished in ignorance of, and without reference to, the offer: see [6-15]–[6-18]. As to ratification in such a context see also Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd (1987) 8 NSWLR 270 at 282 per McHugh JA (affirmed without reference to the point (1988) 165 CLR 107). 125. [1983] 1 NSWLR 431. 126. For a discussion of the two New South Wales cases, see S W Cavanagh, ‘The Ultimate Exclusion Clause’ (1985) 59 ALJ 67. 127. [1999] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 387 at 438. For a discussion of these difficulties see Palmer, Palmer on
Bailment, 3rd ed, 2009, ch 38. 128. See the discussion in [16-18]–[16-22] of Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd (1988) 165 CLR 107. 129. See also The Mahkutai [1996] AC 650 at 664–5 per Lord Goff. 130. See Carter, Carter on Contract, Chapter 18. 131. Williams, Joint Obligations, 1949, p 24. See also Re Broons [1989] 2 Qd R 315. 132. See [16-29]. 133. (1967) 119 CLR 460 (see [6-22]). 134. For the position of joint and several promisees, see McEvoy v Belfast Banking Co [1935] AC 24, discussed by LSJB (1935) 51 LQR 419.
[page 357]
Chapter 17
Assignment of Contractual Rights [17-01] Overview. This chapter deals with the assignment of contractual rights. ‘Assignment’ refers to the ‘transfer’, that is, a process which brings about a change in the ownership of contractual rights. The concept therefore focuses on contractual rights as items of property. It is a somewhat technical area of the law.1 The transferor is termed the ‘assignor’ and the person to whom the rights are assigned (transferee) is the assignee. In the context of a contract, the assignor is a promisee under the contract, and the rights which the promisee enjoys derive from one or more promises made by the promisor. It is saying the same thing to say that the assignor is an ‘obligee’ under the contract, and the promisor an ‘obligor’. Following an assignment, the right to enforce any promise the benefit of which was assigned rests with the assignee. However, the assignee does not become a party to the contract with the promisor. Therefore, if A assigns to C its rights under a contract with B, the contract is still between A and B.2 Technically expressed, C’s rights (against B) lie in property, not contract. There are three main issues to consider. First, the concepts relevant to assignment need to be explained, along with the distinction between assignment and other matters, such as novation. Second, statutory formalities apply to some assignments. They are considered in conjunction with the various restrictions which may apply to an assignment. Third, the effect of an assignment needs to be considered. That involves a brief discussion of the rights and remedies available to the assignee.
Concepts and Distinctions3 [17-02] Benefit. The starting point is that the right to receive performance of a contract is an item of property which is termed a ‘chose in action’.4 The words
‘in action’ serve to distinguish this form of property from property rights which may be enjoyed and enforced ‘in possession’.5 [page 358] In principle, the right to receive performance of any contract is a benefit which can be assigned by one party to the contract to another person other than the promisor. The classic example is a right to receive payment of a ‘debt’, that is, a definite sum of money which has accrued due for payment. For example, the right to receive payment out of a bank account is assignable.6 If a seller has delivered goods to a buyer, the right to receive payment under the contract is a debt which the seller can sell to a third party. But the concept of benefit is a flexible one and not limited to money sums payable as debts at the time of assignment. For example, if A and B enter into a contract under which B promises to pay A $100 per month, the benefit of B’s promise to pay each sum is something which can be assigned. The right to receive a non-monetary performance, such as a supply of goods, is often assignable. And although there are certain restrictions,7 in many cases so also is the right to sue for damages for breach of contract.8 The assignment of contractual benefits usually comes within the statutory provision referred to below,9 as assignments of debts or other legal choses in action. [17-03] Assignment. ‘Assignment’ refers to ‘transfer’. In every case where an assignment is at issue it is necessary to identify what is being assigned. In the context of contracts, the basic distinction is between the right to receive performance and the performance itself. For example, if B promises by contract to pay A $100, A may assign the right to receive $100 or the $100 itself. More technically expressed, the assignment may relate to the benefit of an executory contractual promise or a right or remedy which can only arise on performance or breach of the contractual promise. Most assignments are commercially motivated. For example, if A sells its business to B, part of the consideration will be an assignment by A to B of the debts owed to the business. But an assignment need not be a contract supported by consideration. Just as one person can make a gift of, say, a bottle of perfume by handing it over to the donee, if A has a contractual right to receive a bottle of
perfume from B, that right can be assigned to C by way of gift. However, because a right is not physical property, the idea of [page 359] A ‘handing over’ the right to receive the bottle of perfume to C is conceptually different. Nevertheless, the general rule is that a statement showing an unequivocal present intention to transfer a right is sufficient to assign the right.10 Subject to any applicable formal requirements, the statement may be written or verbal. On that basis, a statement in the nature of a ‘request’ or a ‘revocable mandate’11 is not usually an assignment.12 [17-04] Agreement to assign. There is a distinction between a promise to assign a contractual right and the immediate assignment of the right. Also, as noted above, where B promises to pay A $100, there is a distinction between assignment by A of the right to receive a payment of $100 and assignment of the $100 payment. Where the arrangement is merely a promise to assign, to be binding on the assignor the promise must be supported by consideration. In other words, like any other promise, to be enforceable as a contract the arrangement must generally comply with the requirements of contract law for a binding agreement. Alternatively, the promise must be a deed.13 The distinction between assignment of the right to receive a money sum and assignment of the money sum itself leads to two points. First, if A has the benefit of a promise by B to pay A $100 on the occurrence of an event, such as delivery of goods, an assignment of the $100 prior to occurrence of the event (delivery) is the assignment of future property. Such an assignment is really a promise to assign, which must be supported by consideration in order to be binding. The point is that even though the assignment may be expressed in terms of immediate assignment, since B is not bound to pay A until the goods are delivered, the assignment is really no more than a promise by A to assign. If Tom has promised to give Sara a bottle of perfume for her birthday, it would make no sense for Sara to ‘give’ that bottle to Mary on the day before her birthday. She can only promise to make the gift to Mary if Tom fulfils his promise. Second, an assignment of the right to receive $100 is an assignment of present
property which does not need to be supported by consideration. [17-05] Sub-contracting and assignment. Assignment is concerned with contractual benefits, not burdens. The burden of a contract cannot be unilaterally assigned.14 Assignment is therefore distinguishable from subcontracting. For example, if A has agreed to do building work for B, although A cannot assign that burden to C, A can generally appoint C as sub-contractor to do the work on A’s behalf. [page 360] The rules regulating assignment do not directly govern whether one party may sub-contract for another to do its work. However, the applicable rules are in many respects analogous.15 Thus, a contractor will not be permitted to subcontract work where the right to do so is prohibited by the contract, or where the contract is personal to the contractor. And just as assignment does not change the parties to a contract, so sub-contracting the work in the earlier example does not make the sub-contractor a party to a building contract. It follows from the above that in the building contract example there are two contracts. One is the contract between A as builder and B as principal under which the builder promises to do the work. The other is the contract between the builder and C (the sub-contractor), under which the subcontractor promises the builder that it will do the work which the builder agreed to do. It also follows that breach by the sub-contractor of its contract with the builder will generally mean that the builder has breached its contract with the principal. [17-06] Novation.16 The usual way by which contractual burdens are ‘transferred’ is by a process known as ‘novation’. Novation is different from assignment.17 In contrast with assignment, novation relates to both benefit and burden. It must be achieved by contract (or deed) and each party must consent.18 The effect is to create a new contract the effect of which is (usually) to substitute one person for another in respect of the burden of the contract which is novated.19 The contrast between assignment and novation can be explained by reference to a sale of B Ltd’s cleaning business. If A owns all the shares in B Ltd, it is open to A to transfer the business to C by transferring ownership of the company to C. Therefore, A can simply assign all its shares in B Ltd to C. But if B Ltd has
several business activities, of which the cleaning business is merely one, assignment of the shares would be inappropriate if C only wishes to buy the cleaning business. B Ltd (not A) could of course assign the rights under its cleaning contracts with third parties (D) to C. However, that would leave B Ltd with the obligation to perform those contracts. Accordingly, it is necessary for B Ltd, C and D to join in a novation contract under which D consents to C being substituted for B Ltd as the party to the cleaning contracts with D. The impact of the novation is to discharge the contracts between B Ltd and D, and to create new contracts between C and D. Whether those contracts are on the same terms as the old contracts is a matter for agreement between B Ltd and D. [page 361] Whether there is a novation depends on the intention of the parties.20 Novation may be express (for example, to substitute a purchaser of property for the original purchaser) or implied from conduct.21
Formalities and Restrictions22 [17-07] Formalities for assignment. Section 12 of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) states: Any absolute assignment by writing under the hand of the assignor (not purporting to be by way of charge only) of any debt or other legal chose in action, of which express notice in writing has been given to the debtor, trustee or other person from whom the assignor would have been entitled to receive or claim such debt or chose in action, shall be, and be deemed to have been effectual in law (subject to all equities which would have been entitled to priority over the right of the assignee if this Act had not passed) to pass and transfer the legal right to such debt or chose in action from the date of such notice, and all legal and other remedies for the same, and the power to give a good discharge for the same without the concurrence of the assignor: Provided always that if the debtor, trustee, or other person liable in respect of such debt or chose in action has notice that such assignment is disputed by the assignor or anyone claiming under the assignor, or any other opposing or conflicting claims to such debt or chose in action, the debtor, trustee or other person liable shall be entitled if he or she thinks fit, to call upon the several persons making claim thereto to interplead concerning the same, or he or she may, if he or she thinks fit, pay the same into court under and in conformity with the provisions of the Acts for the relief of trustees.
There are corresponding provisions in all other jurisdictions.23 Some are expressed in slightly less complex language. For the purposes of this book, it is unnecessary to consider the details of application of the provision. However, the following points can be made. First, in applying to an absolute assignment, not
purporting to be by way of charge only, of ‘any debt or other legal chose in action’, the provision applies to the absolute assignment of a contractual right. An executory promise to pay money or promise a non-monetary benefit is an ‘other legal chose in action’. Second, the assignment must be in writing and ‘under the hand’ of the assignor. This suggests that a personal signature is required, so that the signature of an agent will not suffice. [page 362] Third, express notice in writing must be given to the ‘debtor’.24 For the purposes of the assignment of a contractual right, the promisor under the contract is a ‘debtor’. Fourth, if the requirements of the provision are met, the effect is that the assignment is a transfer of the legal right to the debt or other chose in action from the date of the notice.25 Fifth, the reference to ‘subject to all equities’ is an acknowledgment that the assignee cannot enjoy rights which are superior to those which the assignor actually enjoyed.26 In other words, the assignor cannot transfer a greater interest than it enjoyed under the contract. Sixth, not all assignments are regulated by s 12. Equitable principles apply to property, such as part of a debt or ‘future’ property, not assignable under the statutory procedure.27 Different provisions regulating formality may apply in respect of the disposition of an equitable interest. Similarly, certain choses, including rights in intellectual property, are recognised as assignable,28 or regulated by, other statutory provisions.29 [17-08] Burden not assignable. The principles stated and explained above do not apply to an assignment of the burden of a contract.30 It is fundamental to the conception of contract that the obligation to perform a contract cannot be unilaterally assigned by the promisor to a third party.31 For example, the sale of a business does not transfer vendor’s employment contracts except where statute so provides.32 As was explained above,33 novation is generally the way by which contractual burdens are in effect transferred.
[page 363] Therefore, just as each party to a contract must agree to a variation, discharge or rescission of a contract, each party must agree if a third person is to take over the obligation of a contracting party (promisor) to perform a contract. It follows that if there is a contract between A and B, and A assigns ‘the contract’ to C, the reference point for ‘the contract’ is ‘the benefit of the contract’.34 It also follows that, although the assignment of a chose in action will be effective to vest the right to receive performance in the assignee, the assignor remains subject to the contractual burden. For example, in Pan Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v Creditcorp Ltd (The Trident Beauty),35 notwithstanding that they had validly assigned the right to receive hire payments under a charterparty, shipowners remained liable to perform their contract, and the charterers could not enforce the contract against the assignee. In some cases, where there is a purported assignment of the ‘whole contract’ including its burdens, the assignee as well as the assignor has been treated as obliged to discharge the burdens of the original contract in order to enjoy the benefit of the assignment.36 However, in so far as such cases rely on a principle of ‘pure benefit and burden’, that is, a principle that a party must accept the burden of a contract in order to take an assignment of the benefit of a contract, they are of doubtful authority.37 The general rule is that a person may take the benefit of a contract without being required to discharge its burdens. However, there is no doubt that in certain situations it will be necessary for the assignee to discharge the burden of a contract in order to enjoy its benefit. But that will be because of the nature of the right. For example, if B grants to A the right to call for a supply of goods, and A assigns to C the benefit of that right, C must pay for any goods which B supplies.38 [17-09] Restrictions on assignment. There are restrictions on the ability to assign the benefit of contracts. These restrictions derive from a variety of considerations. For example, some rights are so connected with other rights that they cannot be assigned independently of those other rights. For example, doubts may arise as to the ability of a creditor to assign the benefit of a guarantee while retaining the benefit of the guaranteed debt.39 And in Pacific Brands Sport & Leisure Pty Ltd v Underworks Pty Ltd40 [page 364]
the benefit of a clause conferring a right to terminate the contract for breach was not assignable where it was an inseparable part of the interest enjoyed under a contractual licence. There is a brief discussion below of the following restrictions: personal rights; express restrictions; and public policy and statute. [17-10] Personal rights. ‘Personal’ contractual rights are not assignable.41 Whether the parties regarded the contract as personal to the assignor depends on the construction of the contract as a whole If there is no express provision, the parties’ intention must be inferred from an analysis of the nature of the subject matter, the characteristics of the assignor and the rights which the contract confers. If the identity of the would-be assignor is a material consideration, the benefit of the contract is not assignable. For example, in Tolhurst v The Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers (1900) Ltd,42 a contract to supply chalk for a period of up to 50 years was held not to be personal to the assignor. But in Pacific Brands Sport & Leisure Pty Ltd v Underworks Pty Ltd,43 having regard to the nature of the rights and obligations under a contractual licence, the benefit of the licence was personal to the assignor and was not assignable. It is also relevant to consider whether the contract defines the parties to include their ‘assigns’44 or ‘permitted assigns’.45 [17-11] Express restrictions. No rule of public policy stands in the way of an agreement that the benefit of a contract is not assignable.46 Therefore, a contract may expressly (or impliedly)47 prohibit assignment, or make assignment subject to prior consent. Provisions which require consent usually state that consent must not be unreasonably withheld.48 In Devefi Pty Ltd v Mateffy Pearl Nagy Pty Ltd,49 it was pointed out that covenants [page 365] against the assignment of leases have given rise to a distinct body of authority. The scope and effect of a restriction on assignment depends on the construction of the contract.50 There are two points. First, the prohibition may
relate to the contract or the fruits of its performance or both.51 Similarly, it may be a prohibition on both legal and equitable assignment.52 Second, the prohibition may not extend to other matters, such as subcontracting or the creation of a trust or charge over the benefit of the contract.53 An assignment in contravention of a contractual restriction, including failure to comply with a clause which expressly requires consent to be obtained, is a breach of contract. In addition, the assignment may not be effective to transfer the rights to which it refers.54 [17-12] Public policy and statute. Public policy and statute impose further restrictions on assignment. The principal common law restriction is derived from the rule of public policy against champerty and maintenance.55 The restriction is that a so-called ‘bare’ right of action is not assignable.56 Such non-assignable choses in action include a right to sue in tort for damages for personal injury, and a statutory claim for damages for misleading or deceptive conduct.57 But the assignment of a right to claim in contract, tort or restitution will not usually be contrary to public policy if, on analysis of the whole transaction, the assignee has a genuine commercial or proprietary interest in the success of the proceedings.58 There are other — less important — examples. An assignment of wages or salary, which would deprive employees of the sole means of maintaining themselves and their families, is contrary to public policy.59 [page 366] Particular types of chose in action may be declared by statute not to be assignable as, for example, under legislation regulating superannuation.60 The scope of any such restriction is a matter of statutory interpretation.61 Conversely, statute may provide that a chose in action which might not otherwise be assignable is capable of being assigned. Thus, a cause of action vested in a trustee in bankruptcy by virtue of the operation of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth), and which satisfies the statutory definition of ‘property’, is assignable by the trustee.62
Effect of Assignment63 [17-13] Rights of assignee. Following assignment, the assignee is entitled to receive performance of the obligations the benefit of which was assigned. Therefore, if the right to receive a debt is assigned, the assignee is entitled to be paid the debt. Similarly, if the assignment includes performance of a nonmonetary obligation, such as the right to receive a supply of goods, the assignee is entitled to receive the performance (supply of goods). The assignee can also give a good discharge for the debt or other chose in action, without first obtaining the agreement of the assignor.64 [17-14] Remedies. The statutory provision referred to earlier65 recognises that all legal and other remedies for the debt or other chose in action pass to the assignee. Therefore, if the debtor (promisor under the contract) does not discharge its obligation, the assignee is entitled to make a claim. Accordingly, contractual remedies may be enforced by the assignee. Depending on the circumstances, the claim may be to recover the debt, to recover damages or for specific performance or an injunction. Moreover, where the statutory procedure has been followed, the assignee can sue in its own name66 and is not required to join the assignor in any proceedings, such as a claim for damages.67 The entitlements of the assignee are the same as those of the assignor. Therefore, the assignee is entitled to enforce remedies to the same extent that the assignor could have done had the right to receive the debt or [page 367] performance of the contract not been assigned. In short, the assignee is entitled to recover whatever the assignor could have recovered had the assignment not occurred.68 Whether this limits the amount which the assignee can recover in a claim for damages for breach of contract will depend on the circumstances,69 including whether the assignment occurred before or after the breach of the agreement.70 [17-15] No privity. The entitlements summarised above do not show that the assignee has become a party to the contract. In essence, there is simply a change in the identity of the person entitled to enjoy the chose in action.71
In more technical terms, any cause of action is one to enforce what the law regards as a property right. It is therefore not inconsistent with the privity of contract doctrine.72 1.
For a summary of the principal rules see Pacific Brands Sport & Leisure Pty Ltd v Underworks Pty Ltd (2006) 230 ALR 56 at 63–5; [2006] FCAFC 40 at [32].
2.
See further [17-15].
3.
See Tolhurst, The Assignment of Contractual Rights, 2006, chs 1–3.
4.
See Torkington v Magee [1902] 2 KB 427 at 430 (reversed on other grounds [1903] 1 KB 644). For a recent discussion see Tan Yock Lin, ‘Choses in Action: Still More Contract than Property?’ (2010) 26 JCL 160.
5.
See Smith v ANL Ltd (2000) 204 CLR 493 at 504; 176 ALR 449 at 455 (a right enforceable by action). See also Equuscorp Pty Ltd (formerly Equus Financial Services Ltd) v Haxton (2012) 286 ALR 12 at 30; [2012] HCA 7 at [48] per French CJ Crennan and Kiefel JJ (‘tangled historical background’).
6.
See Sheahan v Carrier Air Conditioning Pty Ltd (1997) 189 CLR 407 at 428, 449; 147 ALR 1 at 13, 29.
7.
See [17-12].
8.
See Camdex International Ltd v Bank of Zambia [1998] QB 22 at 32. See also Misner v Australian Capital Territory (2000) 146 ACTR 1 at 9–10 (right to rectification is assignable). On the right to sue in restitution see Equuscorp Pty Ltd (formerly Equus Financial Services Ltd) v Haxton (2012) 286 ALR 12; [2012] HCA 7; see also Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2008, para 1534.
9.
See [17-07].
10.
See eg Comptroller of Stamps (Vic) v Howard-Smith (1936) 54 CLR 614; Norman v FCT (1963) 109 CLR 9.
11.
For the difference between assignment and payment of a debt by a cheque, that is, a mandate to a banker, see Parsons v R (1999) 195 CLR 619 at 630; 160 ALR 531 at 538–9 (see G J Tolhurst (1999) 14 JCL 276).
12.
See Comptroller of Stamps (Vic) v Howard-Smith (1936) 54 CLR 614 at 620; Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd (1967) 119 CLR 460.
13.
See [6-12].
14.
See [17-08].
15.
See [28-18].
16.
See generally Julian Bailey, ‘Novation’ (1999) 14 JCL 189.
17.
See Olsson v Dyson (1969) 120 CLR 365 at 388–90; Toikan International Insurance Broking Pty Ltd v Plasteel Windows Australia Pty Ltd (1989) 15 NSWLR 641 at 645.
18.
On whether consent can be given ‘in advance’ see Leveraged Equities Ltd v Goodridge (2011) 274 ALR 655; [2011] FCAFC 3.
19.
See Abbott v Hessen (1913) 15 WAR 80; Vickery v Woods (1952) 85 CLR 336 at 349–50; Pacific Brands Sport & Leisure Pty Ltd v Underworks Pty Ltd (2006) 230 ALR 56 at 64; [2006] FCAFC 40 at [32].
20.
See Vickery v Woods (1952) 85 CLR 336 at 345; Fightvision Pty Ltd v Onisforou (1999) 47 NSWLR
473 at 491–2. 21.
See eg George v Roach (1942) 67 CLR 253 at 262 (agreement for sale of a business was novated so that a new purchaser was substituted); Fightvision Pty Ltd v Onisforou (1999) 47 NSWLR 473 at 492–3 (conduct amounted to novation by conduct). Contrast K A & C Smith Pty Ltd v Ward (1998) 45 NSWLR 702 at 713 (insufficient evidence to justify conclusion that franchise agreement had been novated).
22.
See Tolhurst, The Assignment of Contractual Rights, 2006, chs 6 and 7.
23.
See ACT: Civil Law (Property) Act 2006, s 205; NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 182(1); Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 199; SA: Law of Property Act 1936, s 15; Tas: Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1884, s 86; Vic: Property Law Act 1958, s 134; WA: Property Law Act 1969, s 20. The provisions are based on (UK) Judicature Act 1873, s 25(6).
24.
See eg Anning v Anning (1907) 4 CLR 1049.
25.
See further [17-13]–[17-15].
26.
See eg Glencore Grain Ltd v Agros Trading Co [1999] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 410. See further [17-14].
27.
See generally Tolhurst v The Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers (1900) Ltd [1903] AC 414 at 424; William Brandt’s Sons & Co v Dunlop Rubber Co [1905] AC 454 at 461; Sandford v DV Building & Constructions Co Pty Ltd [1963] VR 137 at 139; Norman v FCT (1963) 109 CLR 9 at 27; Olsson v Dyson (1969) 120 CLR 365; McIntyre v Gye (1994) 122 ALR 289 at 295–6; King (as trustees of the Travel Compensation Fund) v Yurisich (2006) 234 ALR 425 at 446; [2006] FCAFC 136 at [78]. See Ong Chin-Aun, ‘Notice in Equitable Assignment of Choses in Action: Divergence in the Common Law and its Impact’ (2002) 18 JCL 107; G J Tolhurst, ‘Equitable Assignment of Legal Rights: A Resolution to a Conundrum’ (2002) 118 LQR 98.
28.
See eg Marine Insurance Act 1909 (Cth), s 56(1) (a marine policy is assignable unless it contains terms expressly prohibiting assignment). See Raiffeisen Zentralbank Osterreich AG v Five Star Trading LLC (The Mount I) [2001] QB 825 at 849–50, 858; [2001] EWCA 68 at [58], [80].
29.
See also Marine Insurance Act 1909 (Cth), ss 56(2), 57; Bills of Exchange Act 1909 (Cth), ss 36–43; Life Insurance Act 1995 (Cth), s 200.
30.
See Michael Furmston, ‘The Assignment of Contractual Burdens’ (1998) 13 JCL 42; H O Hunter, ‘Commentary on “The Assignment of Contractual Burdens”’ (1998) 13 JCL 51.
31.
See Linden Gardens Trust Ltd v Lenesta Sludge Disposals Ltd [1994] 1 AC 85 at 103. See also Baytur SA v Finagro Holding SA [1992] QB 610 at 618; Century 21 (South Pacific) Pty Ltd (in liq) v Century 21 Real Estate Corp (1996) 136 ALR 687 at 698.
32.
See British Fuels Ltd v Baxendale [1999] 2 AC 52 at 76. See also Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Orica Ltd (1998) 194 CLR 500 at 513; 154 ALR 1 at 9.
33.
See [17-06].
34.
See the general discussion in Linden Gardens Trust Ltd v Lenesta Sludge Disposals Ltd [1994] 1 AC 85.
35.
[1994] 1 WLR 161 (see G J Tolhurst, ‘Assignment, Equities The Trident Beauty and Restitution’ [1999] CLJ 546). See also Konstas v Southern Cross Pumps and Irrigation Pty Ltd (1996) 217 ALR 310.
36.
See Tito v Waddell (No 2) [1977] Ch 106. Cf Estates Gazette Ltd v Benjamin Restaurants Ltd [1994] 1 WLR 1528; Jenkins v Young Brothers Transport Ltd [2006] 1 WLR 3189 at 3198; [2006] EWHC 151 (QB) at [30].
37.
See Rhone v Stephens [1994] 2 AC 310 at 322. Cf Gallagher v Rainbow (1994) 179 CLR 624 at 647; 121 ALR 129 at 146.
38.
See Tolhurst v The Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers (1900) Ltd [1903] AC 414.
39.
See Hutchens v Deauville Investments Pty Ltd (1986) 68 ALR 367 at 373; see G J Tolhurst, ‘The Assignment of Guarantees: A Review of Hutchens v Deauville Investments Pty Ltd’ (2011) 27 JCL 65.
40.
(2006) 230 ALR 56 at 68–9; [2006] FCAFC 40 at [49], [51]. See also Investors Compensation Scheme Ltd v West Bromwich Building Society [1998] 1 WLR 896 at 915, 916 (right to rescind mortgage).
41.
See Tolhurst v The Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers (1900) Ltd [1903] AC 414; Bruce v Tyley (1916) 21 CLR 277 at 284, 289; Carter v Hyde (1923) 33 CLR 115; Nokes v Doncaster Amalgamated Collieries Ltd [1940] AC 1014; Devefi Pty Ltd v Mateffy Pearl Nagy Pty Ltd (1993) 113 ALR 225; Bluebottle UK Ltd v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation (2007) 232 CLR 598 at 622–3; 240 ALR 597 at 614; [2007] HCA 54 at [65].
42.
[1903] AC 414. See also Leveraged Equities Ltd v Goodridge (2011) 274 ALR 655 at 697; [2011] FCAFC 3 at [362].
43.
(2006) 230 ALR 56; [2006] FCAFC 40.
44.
Cf Tolhurst v The Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers (1900) Ltd [1903] AC 414 at 420.
45.
See Pacific Brands Sport & Leisure Pty Ltd v Underworks Pty Ltd (2006) 230 ALR 56 at 71, 73; [2006] FCAFC 40 at [61], [71], where Finn and Sundberg JJ said that a reference to ‘permitted assigns’ means that the assignment must be permitted on a ‘proper’ construction of the contract.
46.
See Devefi Pty Ltd v Mateffy Pearl Nagy Pty Ltd (1993) 113 ALR 225.
47.
Pacific Brands Sport & Leisure Pty Ltd v Underworks Pty Ltd (2006) 230 ALR 56 at 64; [2006] FCAFC 40 at [32].
48.
See, eg Norwich Union Life Insurance Society v Shopmoor Ltd [1999] 1 WLR 531 at 543–8; Footwear Corp Ltd v Amplight Properties Ltd [1999] 1 WLR 551 at 555–60.
49.
(1993) 113 ALR 225 at 236.
50.
See Linden Gardens Trust Ltd v Lenesta Sludge Disposals Ltd [1994] 1 AC 85 at 106.
51.
See Linden Gardens Trust Ltd v Lenesta Sludge Disposals Ltd [1994] 1 AC 85 at 106; Barbados Trust Co Ltd (formerly CI Trustees (Asia Pacific) Ltd) v Bank of Zambia [2007] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 495 at 510; [2007] EWCA Civ 148 at [70].
52.
See R v Chester and North Wales Legal Aid Area Office (No 12); Ex parte Floods of Queensferry Ltd [1998] 1 WLR 1496 at 1501, 1504.
53.
See Don King Productions Inc v Warren [2000] Ch 291 at 337–8; Barbados Trust Co Ltd (formerly CI Trustees (Asia Pacific) Ltd) v Bank of Zambia [2007] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 495 at 512–13; [2007] EWCA Civ 148 at [78]–[88] (see P G Turner [2008] CLJ 23). See P G Turner, ‘Charges of Unassignable Rights’ (2004) 20 JCL 97.
54.
See Williams v Frayne (1937) 58 CLR 710 at 719, 731; Anning v Anning (1907) 4 CLR 1049; Linden Gardens Trust Ltd v Lenesta Sludge Disposals Ltd [1994] 1 AC 85 at 106. Cf Bluebottle UK Ltd v Deputy Commissioner of Taxation (2007) 232 CLR 598 at 624; 240 ALR 597 at 615; [2007] HCA 54 at [69] (impact of company’s constitution was that the assignment of a right to a dividend, although binding on the assignor, would not be recognised by the company).
55.
See further [25-29].
56.
See Glegg v Bromley [1912] 3 KB 474; Equuscorp Pty Ltd (formerly Equus Financial Services Ltd) v Haxton (2012) 286 ALR 12; [2012] HCA 7.
57.
See National Mutual Property Services (Australia) Pty Ltd v Citibank Savings Ltd (1995) 132 ALR
514 at 537, 539. 58.
See Equuscorp Pty Ltd (formerly Equus Financial Services Ltd) v Haxton (2012) 286 ALR 12 at 32, 38; [2012] HCA 7 at [53], [79]. See further [25-29].
59.
See eg King v Michael Faraday and Partners Ltd [1939] 2 KB 753.
60.
See Superannuation Act 1976 (Cth), s 118.
61.
See Burton v Camden London Borough Council [2000] 2 AC 399 at 404, 405 (statutory prohibition on assignment also applied to release).
62.
See Cotterill v Bank of Singapore (Australia) Ltd (1995) 37 NSWLR 238; Citicorp Australia Ltd v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy (1996) 141 ALR 667 at 675–6, 682–5. See also UTSA Pty Ltd v Ultra Tune Australia Pty Ltd [1997] 1 VR 667 at 682–5 (liquidator of company).
63.
See Tolhurst, The Assignment of Contractual Rights, 2006, ch 8.
64.
See Pacific Brands Sport & Leisure Pty Ltd v Underworks Pty Ltd (2006) 230 ALR 56 at 69; [2006] FCAFC 40 at [55].
65.
See [17-07].
66.
Equuscorp Pty Ltd (formerly Equus Financial Services Ltd) v Haxton (2012) 286 ALR 12 at 33; [2012] HCA 7 at [57].
67.
See Norman v FCT (1963) 109 CLR 9 at 27; Cossill v Strangman [1963] NSWR 1695 at 1698–9; PT Ltd v Maradona Pty Ltd [No 2] (1992) 27 NSWLR 241 at 248. As to the form of notice see eg Lonsdale Sand and Metal Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1998) 162 ALR 220 at 234.
68.
See, eg Pendal Nominees Pty Ltd v Lednez Industries (Australia) Ltd (1996) 40 NSWLR 282 at 291 (assignee of benefit of indemnity not entitled to recover its loss if this was greater than that of the assignor).
69.
See Darlington Borough Council v Wiltshier Northern Ltd [1995] 1 WLR 68 at 72–3, 78.
70.
See Offer-Hoar v Larkstore Ltd [2006] 1 WLR 2926; [2006] EWCA Civ 1079 (assignment after breach); see G J Tolhurst, ‘The Nature of an Assignee’s Right to Damages for Breaches of Contract that Occur Prior to Assignment’ (2008) 24 JCL 77.
71.
See also [17-01].
72.
But cf Pacific Brands Sport & Leisure Pty Ltd v Underworks Pty Ltd (2006) 230 ALR 56 at 97; [2006] FCAFC 40 at [192].
[page 369]
PART V
Vitiating Factors
[page 371]
Chapter 18
Contracts Induced by Misleading Conduct [18-01] Introduction. It was explained earlier1 that where a statement is made by one person which induces another to enter into a contract, the statement may take effect as a term of that contract or a collateral contract. It was, however, also said that a false statement may still give rise to rights and remedies even though it is not effective as a term of the contract. This distinction is often expressed as a contrast between a ‘warranty’, in the broad sense of a legally binding promise, and misleading conduct amounting to a ‘mere representation’. In this chapter we consider the legal characteristics2 which such statements must possess in order to be a source of rights and remedies under the law of misrepresentation, the various types of misrepresentation3 and the content of the rights and remedies themselves.4 Although statutory provisions specifically designed to reform the law of misrepresentation are discussed in the present chapter,5 more recent statutory developments in the area of misleading or deceptive conduct, which are more broadly based (but which impinge considerably on the law of misrepresentation), are discussed in the next chapter.6
General Points [18-02] Definition and effect. Misleading conduct will constitute a misrepresentation if it amounts to a false statement of a material fact made by one person (the representor) to another (the representee) in order to induce the representee to enter into the contract and which has this effect. The misleading conduct does not prevent the contract coming into being: the contract is not void.7 Instead, the basic response of the law to this ‘misinformation’ is to say that because the representee’s decision to contract was based on a false
understanding, the representee is entitled to treat the contract as if it never existed. This entitlement, or right of avoidance, is termed the right of ‘rescission’. [page 372] Rescission is the principal remedy for misleading conduct.8 Damages for breach of contract are necessarily excluded if the contract is rescinded. However, if the contract is not rescinded, and the false statement of fact is also a term of the contract, damages for breach of contract may be claimed.9 Whether or not the contract is rescinded, damages may be recoverable in tort (if the misrepresentation was fraudulent or made in breach of a duty of care) or under statute (for example, because it amounts to misleading or deceptive conduct). [18-03] Common law, equity and statute. Prior to the fusion of law and equity, jurisdiction over misrepresentation was exercised both at common law and in equity. The right of rescission for misrepresentation was available on a much more liberal basis in equity than at common law. On the other hand, the common law courts exercised a jurisdiction to award damages in cases of fraud not generally possessed by the equity courts. The fusion of law and equity has10 made the distinction largely of historical interest, although it is still helpful to recall the origins of the current principles. In recent years the legal and equitable principles have been affected by statute. For present purposes it is sufficient to make three points. First, as might be expected, certain aspects of the law of misrepresentation have been reformed and rationalised.11 Second, the statutory prohibitions on certain kinds of conduct by the Australian Consumer Law have made the law of misrepresentation much less significant than it was formerly. False factual statements are relevant examples of such conduct.12 Third, a pre-contract misrepresentation may be a factor relevant to a grant of relief under statutes such as the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW),13 under which relief is available in respect of a contract which is ‘unjust in the circumstances’. [18-04] Types of misrepresentation. Misrepresentations are classified as either fraudulent or innocent. The category of innocent misrepresentation is essentially
residual, containing all non-fraudulent misrepresentations. Following the recognition of a remedy in damages for negligent misstatement in Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd,14 it has become usual, at least for the purpose of analysis, to refer to a category of negligent misrepresentation, that is, one made in breach of a duty of care. [18-05] When writing required. The part of s 4 of the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp)15 requiring promises to guarantee the performance of an [page 373] obligation to be evidenced by writing16 was supplemented by s 6 of Lord Tenterden’s Act (the Statute of Frauds Amendment Act 1828 (Imp)). This provided that no action could be brought based upon a representation or assurance as to the credit or ability of a person unless it was in writing and signed by the defendant. The provision, which seems still to be in force in the Northern Territory, South Australia and Western Australia, was enacted because of the circumvention of s 4 by pleadings alleging a fraudulent misrepresentation of creditworthiness. Local enactments to the same effect can be found in the Australian Capital Territory, Tasmania and Victoria.17 But in New South Wales and Queensland the legislation has been repealed.18 The discussion in the Report of the New South Wales Law Reform Commission19 provides strong grounds for repeal of the provision, which has the anomalous effect that absence of written evidence is a defence to a claim for damages for fraudulent misrepresentation but not negligent misrepresentation.20 Moreover, the requirements of writing in relation to contracts of guarantee have been repealed in some Australian jurisdictions, and a different provision has been enacted to deal with the guarantee of credit contracts.21
Elements of Misrepresentation False Factual Statement General
[18-06] False factual statement a misrepresentation. A misrepresentation is a representation which does not accord with the true facts (past or present). Therefore, promises or assurances for the future, statements of intention, expressions of opinion, advertising ‘puffs’, and representations of law have all, on occasions, been distinguished from the representation of fact essential to an operative misrepresentation. However, a representation need not be express, since the words and circumstances may imply a representation as to a matter of fact, especially as to the state of mind of the maker of the statement.22 [18-07] Advertising ‘puffs’. The reason given for the exclusion of advertising ‘puffs’ (for example, ‘a desirable residence for a family of [page 374] distinction’)23 is that such statements are not reasonably understood to be statements of fact.
Promises and statements of intention or opinion [18-08] Promises and assurances. A promise or assurance for the future cannot be presently true or false, and does not of itself constitute a misrepresentation.24 For example, in Civil Service Co-operative Society of Victoria Ltd v Blyth25 a rule of a co-operative society empowered the directors to suspend withdrawals by members. The plaintiffs were promised that the rule would not be enforced against them. Griffith CJ and Barton J pointed out that this was not a representation of an existing fact which could give rise to a right to rescind a contract to take shares in the society. Whether words are promissory or representational is a question of substance or effect, and not merely one of grammar. A promissory statement implies that the maker intends and believes that the promise or assurance will be fulfilled. In Balfour v Hollandia Ravensthorpe NL26 an agent for a vendor of land told prospective purchasers that in two years’ time they would be able to borrow from a particular building society an amount equal to 90 per cent of the value of the land on the security of a first mortgage over it. It was held that a representation of fact had been made, namely, a representation (1) as to the existing policy of
the building society; and (2) as to the agent’s state of knowledge of that policy. [18-09] Statements of intention and opinion. A statement of present intention may not be fulfilled because of a change of mind or of other circumstances, but cannot be presently true or false unless the intention is not entertained at all.27 A similar comment can be made of expressions of opinion. Neither constitutes a representation of fact. Again, a statement of belief is not a misrepresentation if it was honestly held.28 In Bisset v Wilkinson29 the vendor of a farm said that its carrying capacity in winter was 2000 sheep. The primary question was whether in all the circumstances this was a statement of fact or one of opinion.30 Emphasising that, as both parties knew, the vendor never carried on sheep-farming on the unit in question, the trial judge’s view that the purchasers were not justified in regarding the vendor’s words as anything more than an expression of his opinion was upheld by the Privy Council. On the separate question whether the vendor honestly held that opinion, there was also a finding in his favour.31 [page 375] Statements of intention or opinion at least imply that the state of the maker’s mind is consistent with them, that is, that the person holds the intention or opinion professed. If this is not so, there will be a fraudulent misrepresentation. Edgington v Fitzmaurice32 involved a statement in a prospectus of the objects for which the money raised by the issue of debentures would be used. A subscriber sought a refund, alleging fraudulent misrepresentation. In a famous passage, Bowen LJ said:33 A mere suggestion of possible purposes to which a portion of the money might be applied would not have formed a basis for an action of deceit. There must be a misstatement of an existing fact: but the state of a man’s mind is as much a fact as the state of his digestion. It is true that it is very difficult to prove what the state of a man’s mind at a particular time is, but if it can be ascertained it is as much a fact as anything else. A misrepresentation as to the state of a man’s mind is, therefore, a misstatement of fact.
For example, in Ritter v North Side Enterprises Pty Ltd34 a purchaser of land alleged a fraudulent misrepresentation by the vendor’s agent, namely, that although the agent had assured him that the property would be sewered within four months, the agent knew that it would not be, or made the representation recklessly, not caring whether it would be sewered within that time or not. The High Court held that the representation alleged involved an assertion by the
agent that he believed that the area would be sewered within four months, that is, that there was a representation as to the agent’s statement of mind, and that a fraudulent misrepresentation of fact had therefore been sufficiently alleged. A statement of opinion usually implies that facts are known which could justify the opinion. In Smith v Land and House Property Corp,35 in which a vendor described the tenant of the property for sale as ‘a most desirable tenant’, Bowen LJ said:36 [I]t is often fallaciously assumed that a statement of opinion cannot involve the statement of a fact. In a case where the facts are equally well known to both parties, what one of them says to the other is frequently nothing but an expression of opinion. The statement of such opinion is in a sense a statement of a fact, about the condition of the man’s own mind, but only of an irrelevant fact, for it is of no consequence what the opinion is. But if the facts are not equally known to both sides, then a statement of opinion by the one who knows the facts best involves very often a statement of a material fact, for he impliedly states that he knows facts which justify his opinion.
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Representations of law [18-10] General rule. It is usually said that a statement of law is not a representation of fact. In fact, composite statements of fact and law are more common than pure representations of law. In this connection in Eaglesfield v Marquis of Londonderry37 Jessel MR said:38 A misrepresentation of law is this: when you state the facts, and state a conclusion of law, so as to distinguish between facts and law. The man who knows the facts is taken to know the law; but when you state that as a fact which no doubt involves, as most facts do, a conclusion of law, that is still a statement of fact and not a statement of law.
Jessel MR instanced as statements of fact which nevertheless involve conclusions of law, statements such as that a woman is ‘a single woman of a large fortune’, and that a man is ‘the eldest son of a marriage’, and said:39 ‘There is not a single fact connected with personal status that does not, more or less, involve a question of law’. The basis for the approach to statements of law is that one can only ever express an opinion as to the law on an issue until a court adjudicates on it. Indeed, given that the High Court has rejected the distinction between mistake of fact and mistake of law, in the context of the recovery of payments made under mistake,40 it is suggested that this is the only possible rationale for the continued application of the distinction in the present context.41 Accordingly, a person who
states the law on a subject is to be understood as representing only an opinion as to what it is,42 and whether the statement involves a misrepresentation is to be determined in the same way as a statement of opinion.43 [18-11] Private rights and status. It appears that only pure statements as to the law will be treated as representations of law, since only these can be regarded as statements of opinion. A representation as to a person’s private rights,44 the effect of a private instrument,45 and even the effect of private Acts of parliament,46 have been held to involve representations of fact for the purpose of the distinction. In Cooper v Phibbs47 Lord Westbury said that the distinction was one between [page 377] private rights which were treated as matters of fact and ‘the general law — the ordinary law of the country’. [18-12] Fraud. A person who knowingly misrepresents the law makes a fraudulent misrepresentation.48 This is because, even as an expression of opinion, it can be implied that the person holds the opinion. Thus, in Public Trustee v Taylor,49 a representation that land was owned in a specified way was held to be a representation of law, but, being fraudulent, was actionable nonetheless. In Oudaille v Lawson50 a weekly tenant of an apartment house agreed to sell furniture and his interest in the business and during the negotiations represented that the rental could not be increased because it was up to the level allowable under war regulations. In fact he knew that the regulations could not apply. The New Zealand Court of Appeal held that although the misrepresentation was as to a question of law, when persons state an opinion on such a matter which in truth is not their real opinion, there is a misrepresentation of fact to which the ordinary rules apply.
Conduct and silence [18-13] Question of fact. Whether words or conduct constitute a representation in the circumstances of a particular case is a question of fact for the court. However, because a representation may be implied from conduct, ‘a single word, or … a nod or a wink, or a shake of the head, or a smile intended to induce’ may
amount to representation.51 [18-14] Positive statement or conduct generally required. The general principle is that, in the absence of a special relationship between them, parties negotiating a contract are not obliged to look after each other’s interests. They are therefore entitled to be silent and to disclose nothing. Non-disclosure of facts, albeit material and important facts, is not a misrepresentation.52 Thus, generally, a representation must be found in some positive statement or conduct. However, the legislation on misleading or deceptive conduct has a much broader impact, and silence may amount to misleading or deceptive conduct even though it does not count as a misrepresentation under the general law.53 [18-15] Duties to disclose.54 There are exceptional classes of contract in which, because only one of the two parties will know the material facts, the law imposes a duty to disclose them to the other party. Thus, there is a duty of disclosure where a fiduciary duty arises in the negotiation of a contract, [page 378] or the contract or the relationship created by the contract is fiduciary in character.55 The most important of these ‘contracts of utmost good faith’ (contracts uberrimae fidei) is that of insurance. The general law imposes on a person proposing insurance, or life assurance (the proponent), a duty to disclose to the insurer, whether asked or not, all facts which a prudent insurer would reasonably consider material to the decision whether to undertake the insurance at all and, if so, on what terms and at what premium. Nondisclosure renders the insurance contract voidable at the instance of the insurer.56 On the other hand, a contract of guarantee falls outside the class of contracts uberrimae fidei, and the law does not impose on the creditor a duty of utmost good faith in favour of the surety or guarantor. There is, however, a duty on the creditor to disclose to the intending surety anything which is not naturally to be expected in the relation between the debtor and creditor.57 [18-16] Statements partially true. Non-disclosure, if combined with additional features, may amount to a misrepresentation. Thus, a statement which is partially true may amount to a misrepresentation. Accordingly, a statement which is literally true may be a misrepresentation because it gives a false impression by
not telling the whole truth. For example, in Dimmock v Hallett58 a vendor of an estate represented that the farms on it were fully let, but omitted to say that the tenants had given notice to quit, and his representation was held to be false. More recently, in Krakowski v Eurolynx Properties Ltd59 it was held that where negotiations for the sale of property had taken place on a particular footing, a representation that the terms of the lease instrument were unaffected by any other contractual arrangement was implied from the failure to bring a separate agreement with the lessee to the purchaser’s attention. However, in Arkwright v Newbold,60 James LJ cautioned against a finding of fraudulent misrepresentation based on mere omission, insisting61 on some ‘active misstatement of fact, or, at all events, such a partial and [page 379] fragmentary statement of fact as that the withholding of that which is not stated makes that which is stated absolutely false’. [18-17] Change in circumstances. The time at which a representation must be evaluated is when the representee enters into the contract. If the facts change between the time when a representation is made and the time when the representation is acted upon, the statement becomes a false statement of fact. For example, in With v O’Flanagan62 the defendant, a medico who wished to sell his practice, represented in January that it had brought in £2000 per annum for the preceding three years, and that he had a panel of 1480 patients. Although this statement was then true, it had ceased to be so by the time the contract was signed in May. Because of illness, the defendant was absent from the practice from time to time with the result that the takings of the practice dwindled to virtually nothing, and the number of panel patients fell to 1260. The purchaser rescinded the contract when he discovered these facts immediately after completing the purchase. The English Court of Appeal held that the rescission was valid. A duty to disclose a change in facts was not limited to cases of uberrimae fidei, or cases where the representation in question was that the representor had a certain intention. The principle is of broader application. If a person who has made a representation which is not immediately acted upon finds that the facts change, that person must disclose the change to the representee before the representation is acted upon. Two situations must be distinguished. First, the representor may
have become aware of the true facts which existed at the time of the representation.63 Second, as in With v O’Flanagan, the circumstances which falsify the representation may arise to the representor’s knowledge after the representation was made and before contract.64 In each case, continuance of negotiations and agreement to contract give rise to a presumption that the representation continues down to contract. Knowledge by that time of the true facts makes the representation fraudulent. Where such subsequent falsifying circumstances arise unbeknown to the representor, a misrepresentation is still taken to have been made at the time of contracting, but it is an innocent misrepresentation. [18-18] Fraudulent concealment. Finally, a person may make a misrepresentation by deliberately concealing something, such as a defect in property, so as to cause a contracting party to gain a false impression.65 Of course, such a misrepresentation is always a fraudulent one. [page 380]
Reliance [18-19] Intention of the representor. The representor must have intended the representation to reach, and induce to contract, the representee who claims to have been induced to contract. In Peek v Gurney66 the plaintiff bought shares from existing shareholders in reliance on the prospectus which the promoters had issued upon formation of the company and which contained false statements. The House of Lords held that the prospectus had been addressed to the public, inviting them to take shares originally as allottees. There was no communication between the promoters and the plaintiff, who, by contrast with the original allottees, had no rights against them in respect of the misrepresentation. Once the allotment was completed, the prospectus had done its work and was a spent force. Similarly, it appears that even where there is a misrepresentation directly by A to B in one context and later B acts in reliance on it in a different context not involving A, the misrepresentation is no longer operative.67 On the other hand, there is a misrepresentation by A to B where A communicates the misrepresentation to X with the intention and effect of having it reach and be acted on by B.68 It suffices that A intends a representation to reach and be acted
on by either a class of which B is a member, or even, as Peek v Gurney acknowledges, by the public at large.69 The representor’s ultimate motive or purpose in making the representation is irrelevant as a matter of law, but the intention to induce is essential.70 [18-20] Reliance a question of fact. Whether a person has been induced by the representation to enter into the contract, or to persist in an intention to contract,71 is an issue of fact. The representation must be shown to have reached and misled the mind of the person taking the decision to contract.72 Typically, there will be multiple inducements leading to the formation of a contract. The representation, to be operative, need not have been the sole, or nowadays, particularly in cases of fraud, even the decisive inducement: it suffices that it was a ‘real’ inducement, that is, it materially affected the representee’s decision to contract.73 Where an action for [page 381] damages is brought, the acting in reliance on the misrepresentation is also the loss or damage which is an essential ingredient in that cause of action.74 [18-21] Burden of proof. The onus of proof rests on the person setting up the misrepresentation. However, if the statement is one which by its nature was calculated to induce the representee to contract, it will be inferred that the representation did in fact induce entry into the contract if, after becoming aware of it, the representee entered into the contract. Thus, the representor must prove that there was in fact no reliance by the representee.75 The presumption of inducement is strongest in cases of fraud. In Smith v Kay76 Lord Chelmsford LC said:77 But can it be permitted to a party who has practised a deception, with a view to a particular end, which has been attained by it to speculate upon what might have been the result if there had been a full communication of the truth?
The factual inference of inducement ordinarily arises from the making of fraudulent representations, and this imposes on the representor an onus to lead evidence to displace that inference, even though the ultimate onus of proving inducement always rests on the plaintiff.78 [18-22] Discovery of true position. Even if the representee subsequently, but
before contract, discovers that a representation is not wholly true, it need not follow that inducement is absent.79 Yet there are cases where these circumstances existed but the representor was able to disprove inducement. In Holmes v Jones,80 for example, owners of a pastoral property, in offering it for sale, made false statements as to the numbers of stock upon it. The purchaser refused the offer, and later, having become aware of the inaccuracy of the statements, negotiated to buy on a totally different basis as regards stock, inspected the property and stock, and as a result of the inspection contracted on the new basis. The High Court held that he was not induced by the misrepresentations made by the vendors in the first instance.81 Of course, where it is shown that the representee did in fact rely exclusively upon his or her own inquiries or inspection, inducement will have been disproved.82 But it does not follow from the mere fact that the representee has had an opportunity of verifying the truth of the representation, but has not done so, that inducement can be deemed not to have occurred. As Jessel MR said in Redgrave v Hurd:83 ‘Where you have [page 382] neither evidence that he knew facts to show that the statement was untrue, or that he said or did anything to show that he did not actually rely upon the statement, the inference remains that he did so rely …’. For example, if a vendor makes a representation concerning a property, and the purchaser has the opportunity of inspecting it but does not do so, the representation may still be held to have induced the purchase. Other illustrations are cases where the representation could have been falsified by an inspection of documents which were available to the representee.84 A representee may know that a representation is false in a material particular, but not know the extent of the falsity. In Gipps v Gipps85 the New South Wales Court of Appeal held that such a representee was not thereby defeated in her action for fraud. The case arose out of the sale of the plaintiff ’s shares in a family company to her husband. The representations related to the cost value of the stock in hand of the company, and to the average net yearly profit after tax for certain financial years. The plaintiff knew only that the figures supplied were to some extent wrong. The court said86 that even complete knowledge of the falsity will not necessarily negate the operation of a representation and that only
if ‘knowledge is of the falsity of representations, and that knowledge is accepted as true so that the false belief is wholly dissipated does knowledge defeat the representation’. These principles may assume particular importance where an agreement for the sale of a business was preceded by numerous representations as to aspects of asset backing and profitability.
Materiality [18-23] Representation must be of a material fact. In the case of a fraudulent misrepresentation it has always been sufficient to show misrepresentation as to any part of that which induced the party to enter into the contract. A stricter view was formerly taken with respect to a purely innocent misrepresentation. In Kennedy v Panama New Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Co Ltd87 Blackburn J said:88 [W]here there has been an innocent misrepresentation or misapprehension, it does not authorise a rescission, unless it is such as to shew that there is a complete difference in substance between what was supposed to be and what was taken, so as to constitute a failure of consideration.
This common law requirement no longer governs the right to rescind for misrepresentation:89 it is now sufficient to find a ‘material’ representation. Unfortunately, the word ‘material’ has been used in various ways, including as a general description of the kind of misrepresentation which will be recognised, and in factual descriptions of the misrepresentation involved in the particular case.90 The usage has been loose and confused. At times it has been used in association with ‘inducement’, or in the connotation of [page 383] ‘inducing’,91 and at others, with a more general reference, apparently to ‘representation’.92 And in Smith v Land and House Property Corp93 Baggallay LJ applied ‘material’ or its derivatives to both ‘misrepresentation’ and ‘influence’. [18-24] Relevance of materiality. A ‘material representation’ might signify either a ‘relevant’ one or a ‘substantial’ one. In relation to inducement, ‘material’ might signify: influencing the mind in fact either:
(1) at all; or (2) to a sufficient extent to be recognised at law; or of a kind which, in an objective sense, is calculated to influence the mind either: (1) of the particular plaintiff; or (2) of a reasonable person. In the cases there are illustrations of both a subjective approach94 and an objective approach.95 In cases of fraud, materiality is in itself irrelevant, whether applied to ‘misrepresentation’ or to ‘inducement’, and is not an issue to be pursued. The relevance is as to the response in fact to the misrepresentation, that is, ‘Was the representation a real inducement or not’?96 It seems, however, that ‘materiality’ in an objective sense may still have some part to play even in such cases. First, if a statement is of a kind calculated to induce persons or the particular person to contract, it may be difficult for the representor to contend successfully that it was understood and believed that others would understand it in a different sense. In this way materiality in the objective sense of ‘calculated to induce’ is relevant to whether the representor had the necessary intention to induce.97 Second, where a statement is of that kind, the courts are prepared to infer that it did in fact induce the representee to contract.98 In these ways materiality assists in proving both the purpose and the fact of inducement. Moreover, this exposition is applicable to innocent [page 384] misrepresentations as well as to fraudulent ones, since an intention and effect of inducing are essential to both.
Fraudulent Misrepresentation [18-25] Concept of fraud. Actual dishonesty, that is, knowledge that the representation was untrue, is the hallmark of fraud. Such dishonesty is a necessary element, additional to those already considered,99 which must be
present before a misrepresentation will be characterised as ‘fraudulent’. The modern law has its origin in Derry v Peek.100 Sir Henry Peek sued the directors of a tramway company for damages for fraudulent misrepresentation by statements in a prospectus that the company had the right to use steam or other mechanical power, on the faith of which statements he applied for and was allotted shares in the company. The truth was that an Act of parliament gave the company only a contingent possibility of obtaining the right referred to, dependent on obtaining various consents. These consents were refused as to a material portion of the tram-line. Later, the company was compulsorily wound up. Stirling J dismissed the action but the English Court of Appeal101 reversed that decision, holding that the defendants were liable to the plaintiff for the loss sustained by him by reason of his having taken the shares. The basis on which the directors were liable was that they had no reasonable ground for the belief they sincerely entertained. The defendants appealed to the House of Lords which held that lack of reasonable grounds for believing that their statement was true was not fraud on the directors’ part, and that in an action for deceit nothing less than actual fraud must be proved. So long as the directors honestly believed that their prospectus was true, fraud was ruled out. At best, lack of reasonable grounds for a belief is merely an aid in determining whether the belief is genuinely held, and in this case it was quite credible that the directors’ minds dwelt only upon the statutory power to use steam and overlooked the condition to which that power was subject. Their carelessness was not to be equated with deceitfulness.102 Under Derry v Peek, ‘fraud’ embraces situations in which the representor: lacked belief in the truth of the representation; or made it recklessly, not caring whether it was true or false. On analysis, actual dishonesty and recklessness may merge into lack of belief in the truth of a statement. Therefore, the test is now usually stated as a unitary one: did the maker honestly believe that the representation was true? It is to this extent that moral culpability is vital in fraud. [18-26] State of representor’s mind. When fraud is alleged, the inquiry must always be as to the subjective state of the representor’s mind. For [page 385]
example, where a statement is ambiguous, the decisive criterion is whether the representor believed it to be true according to its meaning as understood by the representor. The question concerning the maker’s state of mind is whether the statement, as its maker believed it would be understood, conveys a true or false impression.103 For example, in John McGrath Motors (Canberra) Pty Ltd v Applebee104 the High Court held that a satisfactory finding about fraud by the sellers of a business could not be made without ascertaining how they had understood the advertisement for which they were responsible. [18-27] Intention and motive. A person who makes a statement without belief in its truth will usually do so intending to cause loss, that is, to defraud someone. But this is not an essential element: it is sufficient (and essential) that the test for all operative misrepresentations be satisfied, that is, that the representor intended that the statement should reach the plaintiff and that the plaintiff should act upon it.105 Accordingly, the distinction is between the ultimate purpose or motive of the defendant (which is irrelevant) and immediate intention (which is relevant). [18-28] Pleading and proving fraud. Fraud must be distinctly alleged and proved.106 It is notoriously difficult to prove. Although only the civil onus of proof applies, that is, proof on a preponderance of probabilities,107 the gravity of the imputation is taken into account.108 The difficulty in convincing the court (even after allowing for the drawing of inferences of fact) of the presence of the necessary moral turpitude has left many plaintiffs unsuccessful.109/ Where fraud alone is pleaded and is not proved, relief will not be given on the footing that the evidence establishes innocent misrepresentation, but rescission is allowable if innocent misrepresentation is pleaded in the alternative.110 An action for damages for fraud lies against the deceiver, whoever that is. For example, in Cullen v Thomson111 the manager and assistant manager of a company who knowingly joined with the directors in the preparation of false and fraudulent reports were held liable in damages for fraud although [page 386] the plaintiff, when he bought shares in the company in reliance on the reports, did not know of their involvement or give credit to it, but knew of and gave credit only to the involvement of the directors. Lord Westbury LC said that ‘[a]ll persons directly concerned in the commission of a fraud are to be treated as principals’112 and are liable notwithstanding that their participation was not
known at the time. Rescission is, by its nature, available only against the other party to the contract.113 However, where fraud is committed by an agent within the scope of the agent’s authority, a principal will be liable to pay damages for deceit and the person deceived may also rescind the contract with the principal.114
Negligent Misrepresentation [18-29] Elements. Negligence, as a tort, comprises three elements: (1) a duty of care; (2) breach of that duty by the defendant; and (3) loss or damage (suffered by the plaintiff) caused by the breach. Whereas a contractual duty is consensual, a duty in tort is imposed. A duty of care is therefore imposed by law. Unlike a claim in respect of a breach of contract, a plaintiff ’s cause of action in tort for negligence is not complete without proof of loss or damage.115 Whether a duty of care exists depends on the circumstances.116 Since the duty in relation to misrepresentation is informed to a large extent by general considerations of tort law rather than contract, consideration of the circumstances in which the law implies a duty of care is beyond the scope of this work. The main object of the discussion below is to indicate relevant considerations in a particular context. That context is the making of a negligent misrepresentation or misstatement, or the giving of careless information or advice, in breach of a duty of care. The three elements of negligence then become: (1) a duty owed by the representor to the representee to take due care to ensure that the representation is true and reliable; (2) failure by the representor to take such due care; and (3) loss or damage caused by the falsity of the representation. [18-30] Hedley Byrne principle. Nearly 80 years after Derry v Peek,117 in Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd118 the House of Lords [page 387]
took the step which had been left open in that case, namely, the recognition of a tortious liability for a statement carelessly made, and not constituting fraud. Giving negligent advice does not cause an immediate loss. The loss suffered depends on how the advice is used, a matter over which the representor may have no control. The ‘field of liability for mere economic loss is a comparatively new and developing area of the law of negligence’.119 Courts have been reluctant to find a legal duty to take care not to cause economic loss in the making of statements, breach of which would give rise, potentially, to indeterminate liability and ‘impose an intolerable burden’120 on business and private activity. Thus, in Hawkins v Clayton121 Deane J said that claims for economic loss are ‘special’ in the sense that they usually involve reliance or the assumption of responsibility or both.122 These elements may be present in a case of negligent misrepresentation, under the Hedley Byrne principle.123 Nevertheless, in the general law of negligence it is now clear that claims for economic loss are not as special as they once were.124 To return to the specific category of negligent misrepresentation, an action will be available where an assumption of responsibility by a defendant is causally related through inducement and reliance to the plaintiff ’s economic loss.125 Since the plaintiff ’s concern is to establish a duty of care, there is no requirement that the statement be a factual representation, at least in the narrow senses described above.126 Thus, a statement of opinion, or an undertaking, may constitute a statement within the Hedley Byrne principle.127 Nevertheless, the usual requirements of misrepresentation will often be satisfied. For example, if an opinion is [page 388] expressed in terms of advice it can usually be said that a false statement of fact is present, because the maker of the statement has impliedly represented that care was taken in expressing the opinion. [18-31] Foreseeability not enough. The most difficult issue in cases of alleged negligent misrepresentation is whether the defendant owed a duty of care to the plaintiff. Because, in nearly all cases, the damage is ‘mere economic loss’ rather than physical injury or damage to property, or economic loss consequent on physical injury, the fact that the defendant could reasonably have foreseen that the plaintiff would suffer loss or damage if reasonable care was not exercised is
not a sufficient basis for proof of a duty of care in relation to information or advice under the Hedley Byrne principle.128 Something more must be shown. Defining that additional element has proved difficult.129 Initially, the law concentrated on whether a special relationship existed between the plaintiff and defendant. However, it is now clear that the Hedley Byrne principle is broader. It will apply in cases where the defendant professes to have special care or skill. More generally, even if the defendant does not profess to have special care or skill, a realisation on the part of the representor that the representee will rely on the statement is an important consideration.130 The existence of a request for the information or advice is therefore important, particularly in demonstrating reliance. However, it is not essential131 and the Hedley Byrne principle may therefore apply where information or advice is communicated to a third party.132 [18-32] Existence of special relationship not essential. A duty of care will arise if there existed a special relationship between the representor and representee. Thus, in Nocton v Lord Ashburton133 it was held that the fiduciary relationship134 which existed between a solicitor and his client gave rise to a duty of care. One important feature of Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd135 was the House of Lords’ rejection of the argument that a fiduciary relationship is an essential ingredient of the duty of care. At its narrowest, therefore, the Hedley Byrne principle posits either that the maker of the statement occupied a position involving the profession of [page 389] special care or skill, or represented that the special skill or care was possessed. The majority Privy Council decision in Mutual Life & Citizens’ Assurance Co Ltd v Evatt136 sought to confine the principle to such cases. In the English cases, such as Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Mardon,137 a duty has been imposed where the only person qualified (or at least the person best qualified) to make a reliable statement was the representor. Ormrod LJ said138 that the effect of the Privy Council’s stricture in Evatt would be that the Hedley Byrne principle would be ‘so radically curtailed as to be virtually eliminated’. When Evatt was before the High Court, Barwick CJ said that the duty of care arises:139
whenever a person gives information or advice to another … upon a serious matter, [in] circumstances [where] the speaker realises … or ought to realise that he is being trusted … to give the best of his information or advice as a basis for action on the part of the other party and it is reasonable in the circumstances for the other party … to act upon that information [or] advice.
The adoption of Barwick CJ’s statement in subsequent High Court decisions140 amounts to a rejection of the majority view in Evatt. Therefore, the principle of liability for negligent misstatement is not limited to persons who have or profess to have skill and competence commensurate with those who carry on a business or profession.141 [18-33] Pre-contract misrepresentation. Although the precise scope of the Hedley Byrne principle remains unclear, no court has yet held that the relationship between parties negotiating a contract is itself enough to give rise to a duty of care. Nevertheless, the cases illustrate situations in which a duty of care has arisen in that context. For example, in Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Mardon142 an oil company was held liable in damages for a negligent forecast or estimate of the gallonage consumption or throughput of a petrol service station, made to a person who was induced thereby to become a tenant of the station. Lord Denning MR said:143 [I]f a man, who has or professes to have special knowledge or skill, makes a representation by virtue thereof to another — be it advice, information or opinion — with the intention of inducing him to enter into a contract with him, he is under a duty to use reasonable care to see that the representation is correct, and that the advice, information or opinion is reliable. If he
[page 390] negligently gives unsound advice or misleading information or expresses an erroneous opinion, and thereby induces the other side into a contract with him, he is liable in damages.
Esso Petroleum v Mardon is typical, in that usually representations by a contracting party will be made because of the representor’s greater familiarity with (or access to) information concerning the subject matter of the contract. There is nothing to suggest that the principle formulated by Lord Denning MR should not be applied in Australia.144 In cases where the plaintiff requests the information or advice, and the information or advice is given in the form of a representation made with the intention of inducing entry into a contract, the duty of care will be readily found and treated as breached if entry into a disadvantageous contract was induced by the representation.145 However, a request is not essential146 and partial inducement will suffice. [18-34] Realisation that statement will be relied upon. An important element
in determining the existence of a duty of care is the realisation on the part of the representor that the representee will rely on the statement.147 For example, in L Shaddock & Associates Pty Ltd v Parramatta City Council148 a local government council was held liable to pay damages for the negligent supply of information to a prospective purchaser of land as to whether the land was affected by any road widening proposal. It is, however, open to the representor to disclaim any duty of care which would otherwise arise. Thus, in Hedley Byrne & Co Ltd v Heller & Partners Ltd149 itself, the maker of the statement disclaimed liability and this was sufficient to prevent the finding of a duty of care.150 Similarly, if a contract is agreed, the defendant may rely on an exclusion clause in the contract.151 [18-35] Seriousness of the occasion. A distinction can be drawn between informal situations in which information or advice is sought, where the existence of a duty of care is unlikely to be found, and more formal occasions in which it is appropriate to find a duty of care.152 [page 391] In L Shaddock & Associates Pty Ltd v Parramatta City Council,153 the council had, through an unidentified officer, orally represented (in a telephone conversation) to the plaintiffs’ solicitor, a Mr Carroll, that certain land which the plaintiffs were contemplating purchasing for redevelopment was not affected by any road widening proposal of the council. On the following day Carroll lodged with the council an application in a standard form seeking a certificate under the Local Government Act 1919 (NSW). In addition it asked whether the property was ‘affected or proposed to be affected by any of the following … Road widening or re-aligning proposals’. A fee for the certificate was enclosed, but no fee was tendered for the additional information, and none was customarily sent or required. In response to his application Carroll received a certificate from the council. The local road widening proposals were not so included and there was no statutory obligation to include the information in the certificate. Although road widening proposals had not been formally adopted by the council, there was little doubt, when Carroll made his oral and written inquiries, that they would be implemented and would seriously affect such a property. In fact, the proposals were embodied in a plan in the council’s records and the council had referred to them in certificates in relation to other land in the vicinity. Carroll,
relying on previous experience, believed that the absence of any notation as to a local road widening proposal indicated that there was no such proposal. The trial judge found that it was the practice of the council to answer inquiries as to the existence of road widening proposals on the law stationer’s form by making an appropriate endorsement on the certificate; and that in the light of this practice Carroll was led to believe, by the absence of any such notification on the certificate received by him, that there were no relevant road widening proposals. The plaintiffs contracted to purchase the property. The High Court was unanimously of the view that the Hedley Byrne principle is not limited to persons who carry on a business or profession or persons who profess to have skill and competence commensurate with those who carried on such a business or profession, and that it is not limited to the giving of advice as distinct from factual information. Accordingly, the council was held liable. [18-36] Cause of action in both tort and contract. With the growth of the tort of negligence, concurrent causes of action in contract and tort arise in a number of situations.154 For example, if a professional adviser gives negligent advice in the performance of a contract, the negligent advice may constitute the breach of an express or implied term requiring competent advice to be given.155 Therefore, the giving of negligent advice may [page 392] constitute a tort which is also a breach of contract, thus providing the client with a choice between suing for damages in tort or in contract.156 More relevant to the present context is the situation where negligent advice precedes entry into the contract. The crucial issue is whether the rights and obligations created by the resultant contract supersede and replace the tortious duty of care. Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Mardon157 decides that they do not. The same approach has been taken in Canada158 and New Zealand.159 It is submitted that this is correct. However, it is possible to find expressions of a contrary view.160
Innocent Misrepresentation [18-37] Introduction. As has been explained,161 under the common law
rescission was not permitted for innocent misrepresentation except where the misrepresentation was so fundamental that the party misled could establish a complete difference in substance between what was supposed to be and what was in fact supplied.162 However, in equity the representor, notwithstanding the absence of moral delinquency, is not permitted to enforce a contract against the representee by specific performance.163 Moreover, the representee, as the party misled, is permitted to rescind the contract ab initio, provided the parties can be restored, substantially, to their pre-contractual positions.164 [18-38] The current approach. Subject to the discussion below165 of sale of goods transactions, the fusion of the administration of law and equity has established that the equitable rule applies to all cases of misrepresentation. Nevertheless, the position remains that damages are not [page 393] available for a misrepresentation which is purely innocent, that is, neither fraudulent nor negligent, unless there is a cause of action under statute.166 The requirement of a representation in relation to a material fact, which is the usual formulation of the type of misrepresentation which gives rise to a right of rescission,167 is broader than the common law requirement of a complete difference of substance described above.168 Therefore, although a ‘substantial’ difference will be sufficient, it is no longer necessary, and a misrepresentation need be no more than ‘material’ in an objective sense.169 Moreover, it would seem that even ‘materiality’ has now been rejected as an independent test in cases of misrepresentation, fraudulent or otherwise.170
Rescission for Misrepresentation171 Exercise of the Right of Rescission [18-39] General. For all classes of operative misrepresentation, the innocent party has a right to rescind the contract ab initio, that is, as from the beginning. Although the representee’s consent to contract is real, it has been given under a misapprehension caused by the other contracting party, and the representee is
entitled to choose either to withdraw assent and be relieved of the contract, or to affirm it and continue bound and benefited by it.172 Since the contract is valid until rescinded, it may create rights and duties in the parties, or cause property to pass from one to the other. The right of the misled party should be seen primarily as a right to be relieved of the contract.173 This is evident when the court declares that a purported rescission was effective, but even where it orders that a contract be set aside, it does so by virtue of the right to rescind vested in the party misled and that person’s expression of an election to rescind. [18-40] Unequivocal conduct required. Rescission must be overt, that is, by words or conduct. It must be clear and unequivocal, so that the other contracting party knows that the contract is not to proceed. Similarly, it is usually required that the election to rescind be communicated to the other party.174 However, in exceptional cases this may not be necessary. Thus, in Car and Universal Finance Co Ltd v Caldwell175 a fraudulent buyer passed a worthless cheque and absconded so that it was impossible for the seller to [page 394] communicate his election to rescind. However, on discovering the fraud, the seller informed the police and took other steps which, although not amounting to communication or repossession, were held to be sufficient. [18-41] Position after rescission. Since an effective rescission for misrepresentation inducing a contract annuls the contract, it causes any property which has passed or vested by reason of the contract to re-vest in the precontract owner.176 A party who received payment will be liable after rescission to make pecuniary restitution,177 and one who has taken delivery or possession of property will be liable to return it. This last obligation involves a duty to use reasonable care to preserve the property to enable restoration of what was received, so far as this is reasonably practicable, and a duty not to abandon the property without adequate notice to the other party.178
Restrictions on Rescission
Introduction [18-42] Types of restrictions. A variety of circumstances may restrict the exercise of the right of rescission.179 However, except where the rights of innocent third parties intervene, their operation in cases of fraudulent misrepresentation is qualified. There is no moral right in the representor to resist the innocent party’s claim to be relieved of the contract: ‘Once make out that there is anything like deception and no contract resting in any degree on that foundation can stand’.180 The following restrictions on rescission are not mutually exclusive: the same facts may establish more than one.181
Impossibility of restitutio in integrum [18-43] The process of rescission. Rescission is both a right and a process. The elements of exercise of the right were explained above.182 References there to matters such as the re-vesting of property illustrate that rescission has important consequential effects. In this regard rescission is also a process of restoration. In order for a valid rescission for a pre-contract misrepresentation, both parties must make restitution. The requirement of restitutio in integrum is usually expressed in terms of a requirement that the parties be restored to their precontract positions.183 The essence of [page 395] restitutio as a restriction on rescission is the proposition that the right is not available if the process cannot be satisfactorily completed. It applies to all cases of rescission for misrepresentation, whether fraudulent or innocent. It follows that although it is sufficient for the representor’s rescission to achieve restitutio, this is not necessary provided that the court may do so by appropriate orders. For example, if a contract for the sale of land is rescinded by the purchaser, the requirement is that the purchaser must be able to restore to the vendor the subject property in the state in which the vendor had owned it before the contract. If that can only be effectively done by means of court orders, these will be made in favour of both parties if restitutio is possible.
Undoubtedly, however, there will be cases in which restitutio is not possible, and in which the rescission will be invalid notwithstanding the representee’s right of rescission. For example, in Clarke v Dickson184 the plaintiff had subscribed for shares in a mining company to be worked on the cost book principle. The mine was worked in 1854, 1855 and 1856 and the plaintiff was paid dividends in the form of bonus shares. In 1857 the company was converted into a limited liability company. The company was later wound up. Then the plaintiff discovered that fraudulent representations had been made prior to entry into the contract. The plaintiff’s shareholding in a company incorporated with limited liability was not even substantially what he had received initially: restitutio in integrum was impossible, quite apart from the intervention of the rights of third parties which the winding up itself involved. What must be considered, therefore, is the extent to which restitutio must be possible before a rescission will be held valid. [18-44] Common law and equity. In relation to rescission, the common law courts did not exercise a jurisdiction to adjust the rights of parties so as to make allowances for changes in position since contract. Therefore, a misled party’s rescission of the contract was either itself and without the necessity or possibility of a court order, totally effective to annul the contract (where perfect restitution was possible) or totally ineffective (where perfect restitution was not possible). Although in the former case an action for restitution, in the form of a claim to recover money paid (on the basis of a total failure of consideration)185 would succeed, it followed that, in the latter case, a plaintiff’s action to recover a sum as money paid would be defeated by reason of the defendant’s part performance.186 [page 396] This strict rule of precise restitutio was the necessary conclusion from the rule of a complete difference in substance applied by the common law courts to innocent misrepresentation.187 The requirement of restitutio in equity was substantial restoration of the parties to their pre-contractual positions, or more simply, substantial restitution.188 It was equity’s more flexible approach to remedies which made rescission more liberally available. Where it was not possible for the representee to achieve restitutio in integrum, equity by its orders would often be able to achieve it. And the more lenient requirement of a
‘material’189 misrepresentation ensured that the representee would be far better placed in any claim for rescission. Nevertheless, even in such cases it must be possible to ‘do what is practically just between the parties’.190 [18-45] Equitable rule prevails. Subject to the discussion below of sale of goods contracts,191 the position today, following the fusion in administration of law and equity, is that the equitable rule prevails and governs the requirement of restitutio in integrum. The leading case is Alati v Kruger.192 The buyer of a fruit business sought rescission on the ground of fraudulent misrepresentation. The misrepresentation was proved, and the buyer had certainly purported to rescind the contract. However, the property to be handed back had deteriorated since contract. Moreover, the lease had been assigned by the vendors, the buyer had actually carried on the business and made a loss, and the business had ultimately closed down. Dixon CJ, Webb, Kitto and Taylor JJ noted that the impossibility of precise restitutio would have precluded rescission at common law then added:193 But it is necessary here to apply the doctrines of equity, and equity has always regarded as valid the disaffirmance of a contract induced by fraud even though precise restitutio in integrum is not possible, if the situation is such that, by the exercise of its powers, including the power to take accounts of profits and to direct inquiries as to allowances proper to be made for deterioration, it can do what is practically just between the parties, and by so doing restore them substantially to the status quo: Erlanger v New Sombrero Phosphate Co;194 Brown v Smitt;195 Spence v Crawford.196 It is not that equity asserts a power by its decree to avoid a contract which the defrauded party himself has no right to disaffirm, and to revest property the title to which the party cannot affect. Rescission for misrepresentation is always the act of the party himself: Reese River Silver Mining Co Ltd v Smith.197 The function of a court in which proceedings for rescission are taken is to adjudicate upon the
[page 397] validity of a purported disaffirmance as an act avoiding the transaction ab initio, and, if it is valid, to give effect to it and make appropriate consequential orders: see Abram SS Co Ltd v Westville Shipping Co Ltd.198 The difference between the legal and the equitable rules on the subject simply was that equity, having means which the common law lacked to ascertain and provide for the adjustments necessary to be made between the parties in cases where a simple handing back of property or repayment of money would not put them in as good a position as before they entered into their transaction, was able to see the possibility of restitutio in integrum, and therefore to concede the right of a defrauded party to rescind, in a much wider variety of cases than those which the common law could recognise as admitting of rescission. Of course, a rescission which the common law courts would not accept as valid cannot of its own force revest the legal title to property which had passed, but if a court of equity would treat it as effectual the equitable title to such property revests upon the rescission.
Thus, the rescission was held valid, although the position might have been
different if the buyer had abandoned the business so that it ceased to exist.199 Although, usually, the contract must be rescinded as a whole, in some cases where substantial restitutio in integrum is impossible a court may make a declaration for partial rescission. In Vadasz v Pioneer Concrete (SA) Pty Ltd200 a creditor represented that a guarantee would apply only to debts incurred by a company after its signing, that is, its future debts. However, the guarantee in fact related to both past and future debts. Although the guarantor sought an order rescinding the guarantee in toto, the creditor had conferred benefits on the company after the guarantee was given. The High Court held201 that if ‘such complete and unconditional relief is to be granted, it must be on some basis other than mere entitlement to a practical restoration of the status quo upon rescission or “disaffirmance” of a contract induced by fraud’. In the result, partial rescission was granted, so as to leave the guarantee standing for so much of the debts as the guarantor had been willing to guarantee.202 [18-46] Illustrations. In Balfour v Hollandia Ravensthorpe NL203 it was held that the deterioration of a house since it was occupied by the purchasers was not a ground for denying effect to the purchasers’ rescission of the contract of sale for fraudulent misrepresentation by the vendor’s employee, but that to the extent that the deterioration was caused by the purchasers’ act (as distinct from diminution in value due to changes in the economy) they would be required to make compensation for it. [page 398] In Brown v Smitt,204 a purchaser of land who had entered into possession and improved the land was allowed to rescind and to recover as restitution: (a) the value which he had added to the land by those permanent improvements which were not mere matters of taste and enjoyment; and (b) the cost of necessary repairs. But he was not entitled to his ‘collateral’ losses arising from the contract, such as losses incurred in carrying on a business on the land. A court will be the more ready to assist the misled party in cases where the representor was fraudulent, or stood in a fiduciary relation to the representee. Therefore, provided always the substantial identity of the subject matter remains, the court will be the more ready to use its powers to make orders for compensation or indemnity in such cases.205
Affirmation [18-47] Affirmation as a restriction on rescission. Following a representor’s misrepresentation, the decision to rescind rests with the representee. Because the decision to rescind is a matter of choice (election), the representee is perfectly entitled to elect to affirm the contract. The rule is that once such an election has taken place, rescission ceases to be available: affirmation is a bar to rescission. The basis of the rule is that ‘rescission’ and ‘affirmation’ are mutually exclusive rights: it is a condition of the enjoyment of either one that the other be abandoned. Affirmation may be express or implied. The former occurs when there is a conscious choice by the representee to affirm the contract. The latter occurs when the choice is inferred on the basis of what the representee has said and done. In essence, the basis for inferring (or imputing) affirmation is a finding that the representee has behaved in a way which is consistent only with an election in favour of affirmation having been made. Analysis of the restriction requires a consideration of the elements of affirmation. As in the case of rescission,206 an election must be made in clear and unequivocal terms, and so an election to rescind or to affirm will not be found unless there are clear and unequivocal words or conduct.207 The representee must also have sufficient knowledge to make the election.208 Although there is a substantial body of law in the context of misrepresentation, affirmation is not peculiar to that context. In fact, affirmation is no more than a specific application of the general requirement of election between inconsistent rights.209 [page 399] [18-48] Knowledge of the representee. The question of election does not arise until the party misled acquires knowledge that the representation was false. The representee is entitled to believe the representation, at least until there is some cause for suspicion, and usually beyond that stage.210 Accordingly, mere partial information giving some cause for suspicion will not suffice,211 and a right to rescind may exist notwithstanding the lapse of a considerable time since the making of the contract.212
Is it sufficient to an affirmation merely that the representee has become aware of the facts which falsified the representation, or is it also necessary that the representee should know of the right to rescind?213 In Coastal Estates Pty Ltd v Melevende,214 Melevende purchased eight allotments upon a seaside subdivision on Westernport Bay, Victoria from Coastal Estates. Melevende alleged that he had been induced to purchase by the fraudulent misrepresentation and sued to recover the money paid under the contract on the basis that it had been rescinded. The trial judge found that the purchase had been induced by fraud. But the defence of affirmation was put forward, raising the question whether Melevende had, by his conduct, elected to affirm the contract so that it was not open to him to rescind it when he issued his summons. The following facts were material: The contract was entered into in September 1960. Melevende first knew in April or May 1961 that the representations were untrue, and he endeavoured by telephone to get agents to sell the land. In January 1962 he was completely satisfied that the representations were lies. He went on paying instalments of interest under the contract up to and including March 1962, and instalments of principal monthly up to and including June 1962. He also paid rates on the land in October 1961 and 1962 because he ‘didn’t know what to do about it’. Although Melevende decided to rescind the contract in April or May 1962, it was not until September 1962, just before the summons was issued, that he saw a solicitor and was informed of his legal rights. The Victorian Full Court decided in favour of Melevende. The judgments support the proposition that, leaving aside questions of estoppel, where a misrepresentation is fraudulent it is necessary to a binding election to affirm that the defrauded party should have known of the right to rescind as well as of the falsifying facts.215 The analysis relies on [page 400] a distinction between two sources for a right to elect, namely, the general law (of misrepresentation) and the express terms of the contract. In relation to the latter the view was expressed that knowledge sufficient to justify a finding of
affirmation is knowledge of the facts which activate the term in the contract. However, in relation to the former, knowledge of the right to rescind was said to be essential. It was because none of the acts after the visit to the solicitor were inconsistent with the exercise of the right of rescission that Melevende was held not to have elected to affirm the contract. Had the right been conferred by the terms of the contract, a greater number of acts would have been in issue, and payment of the instalments of the price would probably have constituted affirmation. More generally, the case seems to assert that knowledge of the right to rescind is a general requirement in cases other than those in which the right is expressly conferred by the contract. It is difficult to see the basis or logic for this. Modern authority in the context of an election to affirm following breach or repudiation216 suggests that awareness of the right, as distinct from knowledge of the facts giving rise to that right, is not in general necessary. There is no reason this should not also apply to affirmation following misrepresentation inducing the making of the contract.217 Moreover, if a representee discovers that a representation was false, but only later discovers that it was fraudulently so, the representee does not, upon making the latter discovery, acquire a fresh right to rescind. Any prior election to affirm will preclude rescission.218 The impact of the view in Melevende is that a representee who is legally represented may be treated differently to one who is not, due to the legal adviser’s knowledge of the law. It is difficult to believe that in all the cases where a representee has been held to have affirmed a contract following misrepresentation there was knowledge of the right to rescind. As is explained later,219 the High Court has left open the correctness of the analysis in Melevende. What seems to us the appropriate rationale for saying that the distinction between implied rights and those expressly conferred is erroneous is that the principles of election are concerned with consistency of conduct. They rely on the inferences legitimately drawn from the conduct of people with knowledge of the circumstances giving rise to rights, and suggest that it is quite legitimate to draw an inference of affirmation where a person does an act inconsistent with the exercise of the right to rescind. Similar considerations led Pincus J in Re Hoffman; Ex parte Worrell v Schilling220 to reject the distinction and to treat knowledge of the facts as enough for a binding election to affirm even in cases of fraud. It may, however, be conceded that in the absence of knowledge of the right to rescind, conduct, particularly in cases of fraud, may need to be ‘more
convincing’, such as by positively showing an intention to affirm,221 [page 401] or by showing the exercise of proprietary rights or contractual rights adverse to the other party or to his or her detriment.222 However, these are matters of proof not principle. [18-49] Conduct of the representor. One other feature of conduct should be noticed. Because principles of election concentrate on the conduct of the party required to elect, it is not usually necessary to consider the conduct of the other party, in this context the representor. However, a representee may find that the right of rescission is not available following reliance by the representor on the words or conduct of the representee. This is the application of principles of estoppel.223 For example, in Coastal Estates Pty Ltd v Melevende,224 Sholl J said:225 If the defrauded party does not know that he has a legal right to rescind, he is … bound by acts which on the face of them are referable only to an intention to affirm the contract, [where] those acts are ‘adverse to’ the opposite party, ie, [where] they involve something to the other party’s prejudice or detriment, as eg, if the defrauded party goes into possession of property sold to him by the contract, or accepts some other benefit thereunder.
It is significant that the representee may be bound by such acts where there is no knowledge of the right to rescind. This shows that, even if there is no election to affirm, clear and unequivocal conduct relied upon by the representor may preclude the representee from asserting a valid exercise of the right of rescission, at least where it would be unconscionable for the representee to insist on the right of rescission. [18-50] Delay. It is sometimes said that rescission must be ‘prompt’. However, as a general principle this cannot be accepted as correct. Thus, when this word is used in the cases it will usually be used either to emphasise that the representee has elected in time,226 or to emphasise a peculiar feature of the contract which the representee seeks to rescind. For example, in Coastal Estates Pty Ltd v Melevende,227 Sholl J and Adam J considered the word appropriate to cases where the representee seeks to rescind a contract for the purchase of shares, because of their fluctuating value and the possibility of third parties being prejudiced. The general principle applicable to delay would seem to be that the
representee must elect within a reasonable period of time,228 and that the particular period of time is governed by whether the delay is sufficient to constitute unequivocal conduct amounting to affirmation. Normally, silence is equivocal conduct and inaction alone, even until the other party [page 402] takes proceedings to enforce the contract, will not defeat rescission. Generally, therefore, it is permissible for the party misled to postpone making an election so long as nothing is done to affirm the contract.229 It is therefore important to distinguish purely executory contracts from those which have been fully230 or partially performed. Where the contract is executory a longer period is likely to be allowed.231 Substantial delay will often be accompanied by conduct and circumstances which will be held to show that the party misled has evinced an intention that the contract is to proceed. Illustrations of affirmative conduct might be found, for example, where a representee, rather than rescinding, has been negotiating for payment of compensation in respect of deficiencies in a property bought,232 or has treated and dealt with the subject matter of the contract in ways consistent only with ownership of it.233 Affirmative conduct of this kind may also make it impossible for the party misled to make restitutio in integrum234 to the representor. In other words, the same conduct may give rise to both bars to rescission.235 [18-51] Scope of affirmation. The representee cannot affirm in part and rescind in part236 unless the contract is ‘divisible’. But, of course, if there are two quite unconnected representations, affirmation of the contract after the discovery of the falsity of one would not preclude rescission upon the later discovery of the falsity of the other.
Third parties’ rights [18-52] Intervention of rights of third parties prevents rescission. Since a contract induced by misrepresentation is valid until rescinded, its performance may cause property to pass to a third party, who thereby acquires rights contingent on its validity at the time of acquisition. The rule is that once a third party has, for valuable consideration and without notice of the misrepresentation,
acquired rights under a voidable contract, the contracting party’s right of rescission is barred. In this way the interposition of the third party’s rights constitutes a restriction on the right of rescission.237 [18-53] Illustration. As an illustration, consider a case where a buyer of goods (B), by a fraudulent misrepresentation, induces the owner (A) to sell to B and that after the sale B purports to sell the goods to an unsuspecting third party (C). B’s fraudulent misrepresentation might be B’s identity, the [page 403] misrepresentation being that B is a person of some status. The misrepresentation might induce A (a shopkeeper) to sell goods to B on credit, after which sale B sells or otherwise disposes of them to C who takes them without notice of the fraud and for valuable consideration before A has rescinded the contract of sale. On such facts, A loses the right to rescind and so cannot recover the goods from C.238 If in the above illustration A were still allowed to rescind, C would have to return the goods to A and would be relegated to an action for damages against B, which may well prove fruitless.239 However if, as in Car and Universal Finance Co Ltd v Caldwell,240 the seller (A) is able to rescind the contract before the innocent third party acquires rights in the goods, then A’s rescission will have been effective and C must return the goods.
Execution of the contract [18-54] Rule in Seddon’s case. In the present context,241 to say that a contract has been ‘executed’ means that it has been discharged by complete performance in all respects. Some cases suggest that execution of the contract is a bar to rescission for innocent misrepresentation. The executed contract restriction is usually described as the ‘rule in Seddon’s case’, a reference to Seddon v North Eastern Salt Co Ltd.242 A narrower source is Wilde v Gibson,243 where Lord Campbell said that although the court will not compel a party to complete a contract induced by a non-fraudulent misrepresentation, once a sale of land has passed from contract to conveyance the court will not intervene in the absence of actual fraud. He observed that there
would be no certainty if transactions could be set aside upon discovery at distant times that a pre-contractual representation had been false. There is some justification for applying the restriction to land transactions where contract and completion are distinct legal steps, the purchaser having the opportunity after contract to investigate the vendor’s title and to make objections and raise requisitions in accordance with the contract’s terms before being compellable to complete.244 In Australia, the executed contracts exception has been considered applicable to land transactions245 and contracts for the sale of a business.246 But in Seddon’s case, Joyce J said the rule applied to an action for rescission by a purchaser of shares,247 suggesting a broader application than land contracts. On the other hand, even allowing for exceptions,248 Seddon’s case has been [page 404] distinguished and criticised.249 The idea that rescission for innocent misrepresentation should be excluded by execution of the contract has been described as ‘curious’,250 because the representee may only know of the misrepresentation after title and possession have been obtained. Lord Denning repeatedly said251 both that the supposed rule had been too widely stated by Joyce J, and that it was to be limited to misrepresentations as to title in the case of contracts for the sale of land. Significantly, an alternative ground for Joyce J’s decision was that the purchaser had affirmed the contract. It is often the case that once ownership has passed, acts of affirmation will occur which will bar the exercise of the buyer’s right of rescission.252 It is thought that the dangers sought to be avoided by the rule are adequately provided for by other rules, such as the restriction implied by the requirement of substantial restitution,253 the impact of affirmation of the contract,254 and the interposition of rights of innocent third parties.255 The observation of the Privy Council in Senanayake v Cheng256 seems to be of general application: ‘Of greater importance than seeking in a case such as the present to attach the label of one or other of these words [‘executed’ or ‘executory’] are the questions whether restitutio in integrum is substantially possible and whether rescission is timely and just and fair.’ [18-55] Scope of the rule. Even if valid outside the land context, the rule in Seddon’s case does not apply where there has been mere partial execution.257 A
particular difficulty in applying the rule arises where property is not unitary but is composite and heterogeneous (as in a contract for the sale of a business) and passes to the purchaser at different times. In the New Zealand case Root v Badley258 the question asked in this situation was whether the contract was still substantially executory. Execution of the contract is not a restriction in cases of fraudulent misrepresentation, the presence of fraudulent intent being a much weightier factor than the dividing line between contract and conveyance.259 Nor is it applicable where there has been fundamental mistake involving a complete failure of consideration so that even at common law relief would [page 405] have been available,260 or where the party against whom rescission is sought had made the contract in breach of a fiduciary duty owed to the other party.261 There is authority deciding that the rule in Seddon’s case is not a bar to rescission for innocent misrepresentation inducing contracts for the sale of goods or shares.262 [18-56] Statutory amendment. The rule has been abolished in the Australian Capital Territory and South Australia.263 It is not a bar to rescission that a conveyance, transfer or other document has been registered at a public registry office in pursuance of the contract.264 The rule has also been abolished, in the context of sale of goods, in New South Wales.265
Pre-contract representation also a term of the contract [18-57] The alleged restriction. A pre-contract representation may also be a term of the contract. This may be because there is a contractual document containing a term to the same effect as the representation, or because the intention of the parties was that the statement was to take effect as a term of the contract under the principles discussed earlier.266 Rescission is not a remedy for breach of contract,267 so the question may arise whether the representor can rely on the representation as a ground for rescission.
In some cases it has been suggested that the incorporation of the representation as a term prevents rescission.268 However, there is also authority to the effect that rescission as for a pre-contract misrepresentation remains available.269 These decisions should be accepted as correct in the absence of evidence of an intention that the parties’ rights and remedies are to be found exclusively in the contract itself. Usually, the fact that it is a term means that the falsity of the representation is also a breach of contract sounding in damages.270 Even if the rule has validity in the context of innocent misrepresentation, there may [page 406] still be a right of termination for breach of the term, for example, because it is a condition.271 However, exercise of the right of termination does not have the same effect as rescission, since the contract is discharged as to the future only. [18-58] Nature of the misrepresentation. Where the misrepresentation is fraudulent, rescission is available even if the representation has been incorporated as a contractual term.272 Therefore, the incorporation restriction, if valid at all, applies only to cases where the representation is innocent.273 The rationale would be that the remedy of rescission ceases to be available because the statement has lost its character as a representation. [18-59] Statutory amendment. Following legislative reform in England,274 it is now provided in the Australian Capital Territory and South Australia that incorporation of a misrepresentation as a term of the contract does not bar rescission.275 Section 24(2) of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) states that incorporation is not a bar in respect of consumer sales and leases. And, in the context of sale of goods, s 4(2A)(a) of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW) provides that incorporation of a representation as a term of the contract does not deprive the representee of the remedies for misrepresentation.
Sale of goods [18-60] Relevant issues. Two features of contracts for the sale of goods call for comment:276
(1) whether the rules of equity affording relief of rescission for innocent misrepresentation apply; and (2) the impact on a buyer’s right of rescission of ‘acceptance’ of goods by the buyer. [18-61] Applicability of equitable rules. Under the common law applicable prior to the enactment of the sale of goods legislation, once the property in a specific chattel had passed to the buyer, the buyer had no right to return a chattel, re-vest the property in the seller and recover the price (if paid) even though there was a breach of contract or misrepresentation by the seller.277 There were, however, exceptions. Thus, a term of the contract might provide for a contrary result.278 Rescission was [page 407] also available in cases of fraud, or where, in the case of an innocent misrepresentation, there was a complete difference in substance between what was received and what was represented.279 Since the rules of equity providing for rescission for innocent misrepresentation had not been applied to contracts for the sale of goods when the administration of the systems of common law and equity were fused in the Judicature reforms, it could not be argued with any confidence that there was a case of a conflict or variance between common law and equity resulting in the supremacy of the equitable rule. Accordingly, when the sale of goods legislation provided280 that ‘the rules of the common law’, including those relating to the effect of fraud and misrepresentation, should continue to apply to contracts for the sale of goods so far as not inconsistent with the express provisions of the legislation,281 this was interpreted in some cases282 as referring to the rules of common law as distinct from those of equity, rather than the common law in the general sense of unenacted law. Nonetheless, the contrary view has been expressed,283 and in the majority of cases284 the courts have simply assumed that the remedy of rescission for innocent misrepresentation is available under equitable principles. The fact that equitable jurisdiction was not invoked in the sale of goods context prior to the Judicature reforms and enactment of sale of goods legislation is not a good reason for continuing to exclude the remedy today, and the better
view is that, in legislation intending to codify the law, ‘common law’ means ‘non-statutory’ law.285 In the Australian Capital Territory and New South Wales286 the issue has been settled by provisions stating that equitable rules apply to misrepresentation. [18-62] Effect of buyer’s acceptance of goods. Once the buyer has ‘accepted’ goods under a contract for the sale of goods, the contract cannot be terminated for breach of condition.287 In Leaf v International Galleries288 [page 408] Denning LJ suggested that a misrepresentation which induces the contract is less potent than a condition, so that acceptance must also preclude rescission for misrepresentation. However, the better view is that since termination and rescission are distinct rights, the loss of one does not necessarily imply the loss of the other.289 In many cases where acceptance has occurred, affirmation will also have occurred. Yet there will be some situations in which acceptance will occur before the representee knew or could reasonably have known of the misrepresentation, and so, before the representee was in a position either to affirm or rescind. Moreover, in New South Wales, s 38(2) of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW)290 expressly provides that rescission for misrepresentation is governed by the general law and not the provision governing acceptance (s 38(1)). And s 24(1) of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) allows rescission of a consumer sale before, or within a reasonable period after, acceptance of the goods.
Damages for Misrepresentation Introduction [18-63] Remedies for deceit. The most elemental system of justice will afford a remedy to the person who is induced to rely, detrimentally, on another’s fraud. The limited remedies which eventually came to be allowed for innocent misrepresentation stood in contrast to the more comprehensive redress which
was available for fraud. The common law gave two remedies to the person induced to make a disadvantageous contract by the other contracting party’s fraudulent misrepresentation: damages and, as has already been explained,291 the right to rescind the contract. The law relating to damages for fraudulent misrepresentations inducing a person to contract flows from the redress which the law provides for ‘deceit’. [18-64] Rescission and damages. As with any operative misrepresentation, the party misled has the choice of rescinding or affirming the contract. However, damages and rescission are not mutually exclusive. The right of action in deceit is distinct from, independent of and cumulative upon the right to be relieved of the contract.292 Accordingly, damages for deceit may be recovered from a representor who is not a contracting party.293 Moreover, although damages may be recovered [page 409] whether or not the innocent party has rescinded the contract,294 the measure of damages may vary.295 On the other hand, even if the contract has also been breached, a party who rescinds for misrepresentation cannot sue for damages for breach of contract because the rescission is ab initio and the contract is gone. [18-65] No damages in equity. Generally, damages are not available for innocent misrepresentation. Such a statement relies on the fact that courts of equity did not have a general power to award compensation. However, in working out rescission, orders for the payment of money may be made as incidents of rescission. Such orders are in the nature of restitution, and ultimately based on the prevention or reversal of unjust enrichment.296 However, although perhaps with the same rationale, there is a power to grant an ‘indemnity’ in certain cases, that is, a power to award to a representee money payable to a third party in consequence of the representor’s misrepresentation.297 The rule that damages cannot be recovered for an innocent misrepresentation is qualified in two main ways. First, the comments above in relation to deceit apply also to innocent misrepresentations which are within the concept of negligent misstatement.298 Second, and more significantly, damages may be
available under statute.299
Damages at Common Law [18-66] Proof of damage essential. A plaintiff suing in tort for deceit or negligence will fail if no loss or damage is proved to have been suffered by having acted upon the misrepresentation.300 The classic statement is to be found in Buller J’s judgment in Pasley v Freeman:301 The foundation of this action is fraud and deceit in the defendant, and damage to the plaintiffs. And the question is, whether an action thus founded can be sustained in a court of law. Fraud without damage, or damage without fraud, gives no cause of action; but where these two concur an action lies …
No loss or damage occurs where a person is induced by fraud to perform an existing legal obligation, for example, to perform a binding contract.302 Nor is the requirement of loss or damage satisfied merely by proof that the [page 410] plaintiff did not make the profit which would have been made if the representation had been true.303 [18-67] Accrual of the cause of action. Since loss or damage is an essential element of the cause of action for deceit or negligence, the cause of action generally accrues only when that loss or damage exists. The relevant period under the statute of limitations for commencement of proceedings begins to run from that time.304 By contrast, the limitation period in an action for breach of contract commences to run when the contract is breached. In the present context loss or damage usually occurs when the resultant contract proves to be disadvantageous. However, the High Court’s decision in Wardley Australia Ltd v State of Western Australia305 indicates that the general rule is less rigorously applied than in the past. For example, in Christopoulos v Angelos306 it was held that where damage depended on action being taken by the dominant owner to enforce a right of way, a cause of action based on negligent misrepresentation by solicitors did not arise when the purchasers completed the purchase. Similarly, although the general rule is that damages are assessed at the time when the transaction was entered into, this is not invariably the case.307
Moreover, the approach does not preclude an award for consequential loss or damage. [18-68] Causation and remoteness. In order for a plaintiff to recover substantial damages for a wrong committed by the defendant, two elements must be present: (1) the loss or damage in respect of which the plaintiff claims compensation must have been caused by the wrong; and (2) the loss or damage must not be too remote. These two requirements therefore apply to an action for damages in tort for misrepresentation, that is, for fraud or negligence.308 The test of causation is the same in both deceit or negligence.309 However, the remoteness criterion is more generous in deceit than negligence.310 In cases of deceit the plaintiff is, subject to principles [page 411] governing mitigation of loss,311 entitled to recover any loss which is a direct and natural consequence of acting on the misrepresentation.312 On the other hand, the (general) criterion that the loss or damage must have been reasonably foreseeable applies to a claim for damages for negligent misrepresentation. [18-69] Measure of damages. The measure of damages in tort for fraud or negligence emphasises the prejudice or disadvantage suffered by reason of the representee’s alteration of position.313 This is the ‘out of pocket test’, that is, how much the plaintiff is worse off by reason of having acted upon the misrepresentation. Broadly expressed, this measure is the difference between the financial position in which the representee would have been if the false representation had not been made, and the representee’s actual position. A more comprehensive way of stating the position was stated by Dixon J in Potts v Miller:314 [T]he measure of damages in an action of deceit consists in the loss or expenditure incurred by the plaintiff in consequence of the inducement upon which he relied, diminished by any corresponding advantage in money or money’s worth obtained by him on the other side …
So, in O’Keefe v Taylor Estates Co Ltd315 the plaintiff sued for £200 being the contract price for the defendant to agist his cattle on the plaintiff’s land. The defendant pleaded fraudulent misrepresentation. It was held that he could
recover the expense which he had incurred in removing his cattle to the land. If he had paid the £200 in advance, rescission alone would have given him a right only to be reimbursed that sum, but the presence of fraud would have given him damages for the expense thrown away as well. The expenditure must be causally connected with the fraud and it must have been truly lost to the plaintiff, rather than adequately reflected in the value of property retained, or spent to make the plaintiff the owner of such property.316 In Holmes v Jones317 the High Court contrasted the measure of damages for fraud inducing the making of a contract with that for breach of contract318(or ‘warranty’ in the broad sense of contractual undertaking). O’Connor J said:319 [page 412] Damages for a breach of warranty are given on the principle that, where a person contracts to do something, and fails to do it, he must put the other party in the same position as if the thing had been done, so far as money can do it. But where the complaint is that the contract has been induced by a fraudulent misrepresentation, the remedy for that wrong is to put the party, who has been induced to make the contract, as far as possible in the position he would have been in if he had not entered into the contract. To put him into that position he must be recompensed for the damage he has sustained by entering into the contract. In order to ascertain the extent of that damage the whole contract must be looked at. If it should turn out that though in one respect the contract is less beneficial to the other party than it would have been if the representation had been true, yet in other respects, it is so profitable that on the whole he loses nothing, no damage has resulted from his entering into the contract and he cannot recover.
The contrast is therefore between: fraud: compensating the plaintiff for loss or damage suffered by reason of entering into the contract; and breach of contract: putting the plaintiff in the position which would have been occupied had the contract been performed. This contrast means that a benefit which would have been obtained had the representation been true is not recoverable as damages for fraud. It is nevertheless true that loss of a business opportunity may be recoverable, for example, where entry into the contract deprived the representee of the opportunity.320 In principle,321 there is no reason why the measure of damages in tort for fraud should differ from the measure in tort for negligence. Thus, the distinction drawn by O’Connor J in Holmes v Jones is as applicable to a claim based on negligent misrepresentation as it is to a claim based on fraud. However, in the
context of negligence the position is complicated by the fact that the plaintiff may also have a cause of action in contract which is based on the defendant’s negligence. For example, assume that a valuer negligently values a property at $8 million when its real value — that is, the valuation which would be placed on the property by a valuer exercising due care — is $5 million. If the plaintiff lends $7 million on the security of the property, it has lent $2 million more than its true value. Of course, if the borrower defaults, so that the property has to be sold, the amount realised on the sale will depend on movements in the property market. Thus, the value of the property may have fallen with the result that it is sold for only $3 million. What is the measure of the plaintiff’s damages? Does the measure differ between contract and tort if the negligence is the breach of a contractual duty of care?322 [page 413] As will be explained later,323 when applying the concepts of causation and remoteness the courts have been reluctant to countenance different awards, depending on whether the plaintiff sues in tort or contract. Although the question of measure of damages is logically a distinct issue on which there is in principle a genuine difference between contract and tort, in South Australia Asset Management Corp v York Montague Ltd324 the House of Lords suggested that the liability of a negligent valuer of property should be the same in contract and tort. Thus, in the example given above, the House of Lords said that the maximum which the plaintiff may recover — whether it sues in tort or contract — is $3 million. That measure is the difference between the actual valuation ($8 million) and the valuation which would be placed on the property by a valuer exercising due care ($5 million). The result is that $1 million of the $4 million loss realised on sale of the property is not recoverable. This was said to be attributable to the fall in market prices for which the defendant could not be held responsible. The South Australia Asset Management Corp decision was subsequently considered by the High Court in Kenny & Good Pty Ltd v MGICA (1992) Ltd.325 Although it would appear that a majority of the court rejected the approach of the House of Lords, it is far from clear what principles should be applied. Some judges spoke in terms of whether the loss attributable to the fall in market prices was caused by the defendant’s negligence. Others spoke in terms of remoteness, and McHugh J considered that the result depended on whether the circumstances
showed that the defendant had agreed that the valuation would remain valid for a particular period. In the result, however, the decisions of the lower courts (which refused to follow the approach in South Australia Asset Management Corp) were affirmed. This suggests that, in the example above, the plaintiff would recover $4 million as damages. [18-70] Relevance of market value. In applying the measure of damages explained above, the first question to ask is what the plaintiff parted with in reliance on the fraudulent misrepresentation. It is the ‘real’ or ‘fair’ value which is to be regarded and not the ‘market’ value, which may, after all, be inflated by the very fraudulent misrepresentation in question.326 Where the plaintiff is a buyer this is the total contract price which was paid. In Toteff v Antonas327 the vendor of a business fraudulently misrepresented the takings. The contract apportioned the total price of £2200 between goodwill (£200), plant (£1750) and stock (£250). The fair value of the business as a going concern was £900. The trial judge awarded damages of £200, on the basis that the misrepresentation related to the goodwill alone, but the High Court held that the misrepresentation had induced the purchaser to part [page 414] with £2200 for the business as a whole and that damages equal to £1300 (£2200– £900) should have been awarded. If what the plaintiff received in return was valueless, the total price paid is the measure of compensation. But if property is received and retained by the plaintiff, damages must be reduced by the value of the property at the time of receipt. Any subsequent decrease (or increase) in value will be disregarded as too remotely connected with the inducement.328 [18-71] Position where contract affirmed. Assume that a seller (S) makes a fraudulent misrepresentation concerning the quality of a property. Assume also that if the representation had been true the property’s value would have been $150,000, whereas in fact its fair value is $100,000. If we further assume that the buyer (B) was induced by the fraudulent representation to buy it for $120,000, but that B chose to affirm the transaction and to retain the property, the measure of B’s loss is the difference between the price paid and the value of the property.329 Thus, the out of pocket test entitles B to $20,000 ($120,000– $100,000). B cannot recover $30,000 ($150,000–$120,000), since that is the
breach of contract measure.330 If the fair value of the land had in fact been, say, $125,000, instead of $100,000, no damages would be payable at all for misrepresentation (since the tortious measure is $120,000–$125,000), even though, had the truth of the statement been warranted as a term of the contract, B could have recovered $25,000 ($150,000–$125,000) for breach of contract.331 [18-72] Position where contract rescinded. Rescission of the contract in the first example given above332 would entitle B to a refund of the purchase price ($120,000). The value of the property is irrelevant. If the land had been worth $150,000, instead of $100,000, B is still limited, in a claim in restitution or in tort, to recovery of the purchase price. There is a clear contrast with the ‘loss of bargain’ measure, which would apply on termination of the contract for breach by S.333 This would produce an additional sum of $30,000 as compensation, that is, the difference between the contract price and the market price ($150,000– $120,000). Now assume this change in the figures. If the land had in fact been worth, say, $115,000, and S had made a representation which, had it been true, would have made the land worth $115,000 no damages would be payable at all for breach of contract, had the truth of the statement been warranted. The measure for ‘loss of bargain’ would be nominal,334 since B has made a bad bargain. However, B is entitled, by rescinding the contract, to recover the total amount paid. But B would fail in an action in tort for [page 415] additional damages (other than for costs incurred) because B has suffered no loss.
Damages Under Statute Introduction [18-73] General. Legislation affects the law relating to damages for misrepresentation inducing contracts in two ways. First, there are statutes the
object of which is to reform directly the common law of misrepresentation.335 Second, there are statutes which, in conferring rights of damages, for example, in respect of misleading or deceptive conduct, impact on the law of misrepresentation by making analysis of the common law incomplete.336
Misrepresentation legislation [18-74] Application of the legislation. The origin of legislation dealing specifically with misrepresentation is the Misrepresentation Act 1967 (UK).337 Similar legislation has been enacted in the Misrepresentation Act 1972 (SA) and Ch 13 of the Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002 (ACT).338 The Misrepresentation Act 1972 (SA)339 applies to misrepresentations made ‘in the course of a trade or business’ for the purpose of inducing a person to make a contract or to pay money or dispose of property. It makes such conduct an offence by the person by whom the trade or business is conducted and the actual representor, who are both liable to be fined. The Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002 (ACT)340 has the same effect with respect to misrepresentations made ‘in the course of trade or commerce’. Of more concern, however, is the expansion of the civil remedies for misrepresentation. [18-75] Damages in lieu of rescission. The court is conferred with a discretionary power, notwithstanding rescission or a right to rescind, to declare the contract to be subsisting and to award such damages as it considers fair and reasonable.341 [18-76] Right to damages. The most significant impact of the legislation is to confer a right to damages in respect of innocent misrepresentations which would not give rise to such a right at common law.342 The right given to recover damages is limited by three considerations. [page 416] First, the misrepresentation must have been made by a representor (defendant) who is a person who might be loosely described as one who is interested in the transaction. That person may be:
another party to the contract; a person acting for or on behalf of the defendant; or a person who receives a direct or indirect consideration or material advantage as a result of the formation of the contract. Second, the circumstances must be such that the defendant (whether or not the actual representor) would, if the representation had been fraudulent, have been liable in damages to the contracting party misled.343 Thus, the plaintiff must show detrimental reliance on a misrepresentation which would at least constitute an innocent misrepresentation.344 Third, the operation of the provisions is subject to statutory defences.345 [18-77] Nature and measure of damages. The damages recoverable as a result of the legislation are in the nature of damages for the tort of deceit. This, it would seem, follows from the way in which the legislation operates. Rather than deeming the representation to be a term of the contract,346 the legislation, while not changing the character of the representation, confers a right to damages where the misrepresentation, though innocent, would have given rise to a liability in damages had it been fraudulent.347 It also follows that the relevant measure of damages is not the expectation basis as on a breach of contract.348 Rather, the court must assess how much worse off the plaintiff is by reason of having made the contract.349 The tortious test therefore governs remoteness, and it has been held that the effect of the characterisation of the award is to incorporate the general rule in relation to fraud350 that the representor is liable for any loss which is a direct and natural consequence of acting on the misrepresentation.351 However, given that it is no defence for the [page 417] representor to prove an honest belief in the truth of the representation352 this seems a peculiar result. [18-78] Statutory defences. Absence of belief in the truth of the representation or knowledge of its falsity is the basic criterion for deceit.353 Absence of reasonable grounds did not constitute deceit, though gross negligence may have suggested that degree of reckless indifference for the truth which had come to be
treated as absence of belief in the truth of the representation.354 A consequence of the Hedley Byrne principle is that absence of reasonable grounds may amount to carelessness and give rise to a liability under that principle.355 Honesty alone would be sufficient to defeat a common law action for deceit, and exercise of reasonable care would preclude a claim under the Hedley Byrne principle. On the other hand, the statutory defence to the action for damages which applies under the misrepresentation legislation requires the defendant to have acted both honestly and reasonably.356 This means that the representor must not only have believed that the representation was true, but also have had reasonable grounds for that belief. What if the defendant was not the actual representor? Section 174(3)(b) of the Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002 (ACT) provides that it is a defence if both the defendant and the actual representor believed on reasonable grounds that the representation was true. By contrast, assuming the defendant took all reasonable precautions to prevent the commission of offences against the section, s 7(2)(b) of the Misrepresentation Act 1972 (SA) provides a defence if the defendant did not know and could not reasonably be expected to have known that the representation had been made or that it was untrue. 1.
See [10-02]–[10-14].
2.
See [18-06]–[18-24].
3.
See [18-25]–[18-38].
4.
See [18-39]–[18-72].
5.
See [18-56], [18-59], [18-73]–[18-78].
6.
Chapter 19. See also [18-03].
7.
But see [20-06], [20-40], [20-44] (mistake).
8.
Cf [39-12] (refusal of specific performance).
9.
See [18-36], [18-58].
10.
Except perhaps in one area. See [18-60]–[18-62] (sale of goods).
11.
See [18-56], [18-59], [18-73]–[18-78].
12.
See Chapter 19.
13.
See [24-17]–[24-22]. See also [24-24]–[24-32] (trade practices and fair trading legislation).
14.
[1964] AC 465. See Richard Buxton, ‘How the Common Law Gets Made: Hedley Byrne and other Cautionary Tales’ (2009) 125 LQR 60.
15.
See generally [9-02]–[9-12].
16.
See [9-07].
17.
See ACT: Mercantile Law Act 1962, s 16; Tas: Mercantile Law Act 1935, s 11; Vic: Instruments Act 1958, s 128.
18.
See NSW: Usury, Bills of Lading and Written Memoranda (Repeal) Act 1990, s 3 (now repealed); Qld: Statute of Frauds 1972, s 3 (now repealed).
19.
Representations as to Credit, LRC 57, 1988.
20.
The legislative prohibitions on misleading or deceptive conduct discussed in Chapter 19 only serve to emphasise the anomaly.
21.
See [9-07], [9-12].
22.
See further [18-09]. On whether silence may be a misrepresentation see [18-13]–[18-18].
23.
Magennis v Fallon (1828) 2 Mol 561 at 588; LR 2 Ir 167. In Dimmock v Hallett (1866) LR 2 Ch App 21 similar indulgence was shown to ‘a mere flourishing description by an auctioneer’.
24.
But see [19-08] (impact of legislation on misleading or deceptive conduct).
25.
(1914) 17 CLR 601.
26.
(1978) 18 SASR 240.
27.
See Allan v Gotch (1883) 9 VLR (L) 371 per Higinbotham J.
28.
See Economides v Commercial Assurance Co Plc [1998] QB 587 (see Malcolm Clarke [1998] CLJ 24).
29.
[1927] AC 177.
30.
See also National Australia Bank Ltd v Nobile (1988) 100 ALR 227 at 235.
31.
If an agent of an insurer makes a representation as to the existing practice and course of business of the insurer in dealing with insureds, it will be treated as one of fact (see Kettlewell v Refuge Assurance Co [1908] 1 KB 545) but if it is a statement as to legal rights under the policy it will be treated as an expression of the agent’s opinion. Cf Re Hooley Hill Rubber and Chemical Co Ltd and Royal Insurance Co Ltd [1920] 1 KB 257; Life Insurance Co of Australia Ltd v Phillips (1925) 36 CLR 60 per Isaacs J.
32.
(1885) 29 Ch D 459.
33.
(1885) 29 Ch D 459 at 483.
34.
(1975) 132 CLR 301; 6 ALR 125.
35.
(1885) 28 Ch D 7.
36.
(1885) 28 Ch D 7 at 15. See also Fitzpatrick v Michel (1928) 28 SR (NSW) 285 at 289; R v Weaver (1931) 45 CLR 321 at 353.
37.
(1876) 4 Ch D 693.
38.
(1876) 4 Ch D 693 at 702.
39.
(1876) 4 Ch D 693 at 703.
40.
See David Securities Pty Ltd v Commonwealth Bank of Australia (1992) 175 CLR 353; 109 ALR 57. See also [20-09], [38-01].
41.
Cf Brennan v Bolt Burdon (a firm) [2005] QB 303; Bibi Sangha, ‘The Law/Fact Distinction in Contract: A Lawyer’s Plaything?’ (1994) 7 JCL 113.
42.
Cf West London Commercial Bank Ltd v Kitson (1884) 13 QBD 360; McIntyre v Swyny (1893) 14 LR (NSW) L 436; Re Hooley Hill Rubber and Chemical Co Ltd and Royal Insurance Co Ltd [1920] 1 KB 257.
43.
See [18-09], [19-08].
44.
Cooper v Phibbs (1867) LR 2 HL 149; MacKenzie v Royal Bank of Canada [1934] AC 468 at 476.
45.
Bank of Australasia v Adams (1890) 8 NZLR 119.
46.
West London Commercial Bank Ltd v Kitson (1884) 13 QBD 360. Contrast Inn Leisure Industries Pty Ltd v D F McCloy Pty Ltd (1991) 100 ALR 447 at 461 (representation of result obtained by applying public Act one of law).
47.
(1867) LR 2 HL 149.
48.
West London Commercial Bank Ltd v Kitson (1884) 13 QBD 360 per Bowen LJ; Inn Leisure Industries Pty Ltd v D F McCloy Pty Ltd (1991) 100 ALR 447 at 460–1.
49.
[1978] VR 289.
50.
[1922] NZLR 259. Cf Solle v Butcher [1950] 1 KB 671 (see [20-29]).
51.
Walters v Morgan (1861) 3 De GF & J 718 at 724; 45 ER 1056 at 1059.
52.
See, eg Smith v Hughes (1871) LR 6 QB 597; W Scott Fell & Co v Lloyd (1906) 4 CLR 572; Union Bank of Australia Ltd v Puddy [1949] VLR 242 at 247; United Dominions Corp Ltd v Brian Pty Ltd (1985) 157 CLR 1 at 5–6; 60 ALR 741.
53.
See [19-10].
54.
See S M Waddams, ‘Pre-contractual Duties of Disclosure’ in Cane and Stapleton, eds, Essays for Patrick Atiyah, 1991, p 237. Cf Charles Harpum, ‘Selling Without Title: A Vendor’s Duty of Disclosure?’ (1992) 108 LQR 281.
55.
See Maguire v Makaronis (1997) 188 CLR 449 at 495; 144 ALR 729; Bristol and West Building Society v Mothew [1998] Ch 1 at 18. See also Conlon v Simms [2008] 1 WLR 484 at 514; [2006] EWCA Civ 1749 at [127]. In particular circumstances, property agreements between members of a family may be contracts uberrimae fidei. See Tennent v Tennents (1870) LR 2 Sc & Div 6.
56.
Khoury v Government Insurance Office of New South Wales (1984) 165 CLR 622; 54 ALR 639. On the requirement of inducement see Pan Atlantic Insurance Co Ltd v Pine Top Insurance Co Ltd [1995] 1 AC 501. In most cases the general law on the duty of disclosure is now regulated by the Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth).
57.
See Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v Amadio (1983) 151 CLR 447 at 454–8, 485; 46 ALR 402. On the proper rationalisation of the principle see Westpac Banking Corp v Robinson (1993) 30 NSWLR 668 at 687ff (see Duncan Murdoch (1995) 8 JCL 286).
58.
(1866) LR 2 Ch App 21. Cf Curwen v Yan Yean Land Co Ltd (1891) 17 VLR 745; Allan v Gotch (1883) 9 VLR (L) 371; Ballantyne v Raphael (1889) 15 VLR 538.
59.
(1995) 183 CLR 563; 130 ALR 1.
60.
(1881) 17 Ch D 301.
61.
(1881) 17 Ch D 301 at 317–18.
62.
[1936] Ch 575. See Rick Bigwood, ‘Pre-Contractual Misrepresentation and the limits of the Principle in With v O’Flanagan’ [2005] CLJ 94.
63.
Robertson & Moffat v Belson [1905] VLR 555; Dalgety & Co Ltd v AMP [1908] VLR 481; Howell v Bennett & Fisher Ltd [1966] SASR 188; Lockhart v Osman [1981] VR 57.
64.
See Jones v Dumbrell [1981] VR 199; Permanent Trustee Australia Ltd v FAI General Insurance Co Ltd (2003) 214 CLR 514 at 534; 197 ALR 364.
65.
Horsfall v Thomas (1862) 1 H & C 90; 158 ER 813; Curwen v Yan Yean Land Co Ltd (1891) 17 VLR 745. Cf Sybron Corp v Rochem Ltd [1984] 1 Ch 112.
66.
(1873) LR 6 HL 377.
67.
See Peek v Gurney (1873) LR 6 HL 377 at 411.
68.
The courts have also been prepared to hold a company a representee where its formation was in contemplation and the representation was made to its promoters. See Mount Gambier Co-operative Milling Society Ltd v Williams [1921] SASR 185; Leslie Leithead Pty Ltd v Barber (1965) 65 SR (NSW) 172.
69.
Cf Clarke v Dickson (1859) 6 CBNS 453; 141 ER 533; Edgington v Fitzmaurice (1885) 29 Ch D 459.
70.
Smith v Chadwick (1884) 9 App Cas 187.
71.
Australian Steel & Mining Corp Pty Ltd v Corben [1974] 2 NSWLR 202.
72.
See Macleay v Tait [1906] AC 24; A-G of New South Wales v Peters (1924) 34 CLR 146.
73.
Edgington v Fitzmaurice (1885) 29 Ch D 459; Ballantyne v Raphael (1889) 15 VLR 538; Wilcher v Steain (1961) 79 WN (NSW) 141; Morlend Finance Corp (Vic) Pty Ltd v Westendorp [1993] 2 VR 284 at 304.
74.
Macleay v Tait [1906] AC 24.
75.
Smith v Chadwick (1884) 9 App Cas 187 at 196; Allan v Gotch (1883) 9 VLR (L) 371; Power v Kenny [1960] WAR 57.
76.
(1859) 7 HLC 750; 11 ER 299.
77.
(1859) 7 HLC 750 at 759; 11 ER 299 at 303.
78.
Gould v Vaggelas (1984) 157 CLR 215; 56 ALR 31.
79.
Sinclair v Preston [1970] WAR 186.
80.
(1907) 4 CLR 1692.
81.
Cf A-G of New South Wales v Peters (1924) 34 CLR 146; Bosaid v Andry [1963] VR 465.
82.
Wilcher v Steain (1961) 79 WN (NSW) 141 at 144.
83.
(1881) 20 Ch D 1 at 22.
84.
See Wilkinson v Detmold (1890) 16 VLR 439.
85.
[1978] 1 NSWLR 454.
86.
[1978] 1 NSWLR 454 at 460 (following Sinclair v Preston [1970] WAR 186 at 191).
87.
(1867) LR 2 QB 580.
88.
(1867) LR 2 QB 580 at 587.
89.
See further [18-38]. But see [18-61] (sale of goods).
90.
See, eg Clark v Clark (1882) 8 VLR (E) 303; Smith v Land and House Property Corp (1885) 28 Ch D 7; Cutts v Buckley (1933) 49 CLR 189.
91.
See, eg Rance v Kensett (1916) 16 SR (NSW) 285; Duralla Pty Ltd v Plant (1984) 2 FLR 342 at 346– 7. See also Dimmock v Hallett (1866) LR 2 Ch App 21 (‘calculated materially to mislead’).
92.
See, eg Sibley v Grosvenor (1916) 21 CLR 469; Abram SS Co Ltd v Westville Shipping Co Ltd [1923] AC 773 at 778; Wilson v Brisbane City Council [1931] QSR 360; MacKenzie v Royal Bank of Canada [1934] AC 468 at 475. Cf Pan Atlantic Insurance Co Ltd v Pine Top Insurance Co Ltd [1995] 1 AC 501. See also Lagunas Nitrate Co v Lagunas Syndicate [1899] 2 Ch 392 (‘innocent misrepresentations of material facts’).
93.
(1885) 28 Ch D 7.
94.
Ballantyne v Raphael (1889) 15 VLR 538.
95.
Arnison v Smith (1889) 41 Ch D 348.
96.
Nicholas v Thompson [1924] VLR 554 at 565–6; Australian Steel & Mining Corp Pty Ltd v Corben [1974] 2 NSWLR 202.
97.
See Nicholas v Thompson [1924] VLR 554.
98.
See Macleay v Tait [1906] AC 24.
99.
See [18-06]–[18-24].
100. (1889) 14 App Cas 337. 101. Sub nom Peek v Derry (1887) 37 Ch D 541. 102. See also Joliffe v Baker (1883) 11 QBD 255; Edgington v Fitzmaurice (1885) 29 Ch D 459; Sargent v Campbell [1972–73] ALR 708. 103. See, eg Clarke v Dickson (1859) 6 CBNS 453; 141 ER 533; Smith v Chadwick (1884) 9 App Cas 187; T J Larkins & Sons v Chelmer Holdings Pty Ltd [1965] Qd R 68; Krakowski v Eurolynx Properties Ltd (1995) 183 CLR 563 at 577; 130 ALR 1. 104. (1964) 110 CLR 656. See also Sargent v Campbell [1972–73] ALR 708. 105. See Arnison v Smith (1889) 41 Ch D 348 at 370; Ballantyne v Raphael (1889) 15 VLR 538; Curwen v Yan Yean Land Co Ltd (1891) 17 VLR 745; Allan v Gotch (1883) 9 VLR (L) 371. 106. See Krakowski v Eurolynx Properties Ltd (1995) 183 CLR 563 at 573, 579. 107. Neat Holdings Pty Ltd v Karajan Holdings Pty Ltd (1992) 110 ALR 449 at 449–50 (HC). 108. Smith Bros v Madden Bros [1945] QWN 33; Rejfek v McElroy (1966) 112 CLR 517; Spies v Commonwealth Bank of Australia (1991) 24 NSWLR 691 at 693. 109. This serves to underline the importance of statutory developments in the area of misleading or deceptive conduct, where, although the civil remedies approximate those available in cases of fraud, there is no imputation of deceit. See Chapter 19. Cf [18-74]–[18-78] (misrepresentation legislation). 110. London Chartered Bank of Australia v Lempriere (1873) LR 4 PC 572; Brindley v Scott (1902) 2 SR (NSW) Eq 49; Hutchinson v McGuren (1910) 10 SR (NSW) 449; Adey v Fisher (1914) 14 SR (NSW) 407. 111. (1862) 6 LT 870. 112. (1862) 6 LT 870 at 874; and cf Sibley v Grosvenor (1916) 21 CLR 469 esp at 474–5, 484–5. 113. For the position of third parties whose rights derive from the contract see [18-52]–[18-53]. 114. Kettlewell v Refuge Assurance Co [1908] 1 KB 545; Lloyd v Grace Smith & Co [1912] AC 716. See also S Pearson & Son Ltd v Dublin Corp [1907] AC 351 at 354. But cf Sibley v Grosvenor (1916) 21 CLR 469 at 474. 115. See further [18-67], [35-06]. 116. See [18-31]–[18-35]. 117. (1889) 14 App Cas 337 (see [18-25]). 118. [1964] AC 465. 119. Bryan v Maloney (1995) 182 CLR 609 at 618; 128 ALR 163. 120. Tame v New South Wales (2002) 211 CLR 317 at 329; 191 ALR 449 at 452 per Gleeson CJ. 121. (1988) 164 CLR 539 at 576; 78 ALR 69. See also Bryan v Maloney (1995) 182 CLR 609 at 618; Hill (t/as R F Hill & Associates) v Van Erp (1997) 188 CLR 159 at 192, 197, 229–30; 142 ALR 687; Esanda Finance Corp Ltd v Peat Marwick Hungerfords (Reg) (1997) 188 CLR 241 at 254, 272, cf at 263–4; 142 ALR 750; Perre v Apand Pty Ltd (1999) 198 CLR 180 at 192–3, 209; 164 ALR 606.
122. See also Woolcock Street Investments Pty Ltd v CDG Pty Ltd (2004) 216 CLR 515 at 529; 205 ALR 522 at 528; [2004] HCA 16 at [21] per Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Hayne and Heydon JJ (claims for economic loss ‘present peculiar difficulty’). 123. Spring v Guardian Assurance Plc [1995] 2 AC 296. 124. The leading cases include: Bryan v Maloney (1995) 182 CLR 609 (see Barbara McDonald and Jane Swanton (1995) 69 ALJ 687; J G Fleming (1995) 111 LQR 362); Hill (t/as R F Hill & Associates) v Van Erp (1997) 188 CLR 159 (see Jane Swanton and Barbara McDonald (1997) 71 ALJ 822); Northern Sandblasting Pty Ltd v Harris (1997) 188 CLR 313; 146 ALR 572; Perre v Apand Pty Ltd (1999) 198 CLR 180 (see Jane Swanton and Barbara McDonald (2000) 74 ALJ 17; Joseph Tesvic (2000) 22 Syd LR 297); Woolcock Street Investments Pty Ltd v CDG Pty Ltd (2004) 216 CLR 515; 205 ALR 522; [2004] HCA 16. See also Miller v Miller (2011) 242 CLR 446 at 468; 275 ALR 611 at 627; [2011] HCA 9 at [59] (demise of proximity as informing principle). 125. See Hill (t/as R F Hill & Associates) v Van Erp (1997) 188 CLR 159 at 170, 197; Esanda Finance Corp Ltd v Peat Marwick Hungerfords (Reg) (1997) 188 CLR 241 at 257. See also Spring v Guardian Assurance Plc [1995] 2 AC 296 at 316; Henderson v Merrett Syndicates Ltd [1995] 2 AC 145 at 179. 126. See [18-06]–[18-12]. As to whether silence may amount to breach of a duty of care in this context see Bentley v Wright [1997] 2 VR 175 at 180–3. 127. See Parramatta City Council v Lutz (1988) 12 NSWLR 293 at 317. See also Welton v North Cornwall District Council [1997] 1 WLR 570 at 587 (negligent recommendation; see Richard Mullender (1999) 62 MLR 425). 128. See, eg Jaensch v Coffey (1984) 155 CLR 549 at 575; 54 ALR 417; Hawkins v Clayton (1988) 164 CLR 539 at 553; Hill (t/as R F Hill & Associates) v Van Erp (1997) 188 CLR 159 at 174; Esanda Finance Corp Ltd v Peat Marwick Hungerfords (Reg) (1997) 188 CLR 241 at 249, 252, 266, 271–2; Cattanach v Melchior (2003) 215 CLR 1 at 18; 199 ALR 131 at 139. 129. See [18-32]. 130. See [18-34], [18-35]. For cases of pre-contract misrepresentation see [18-33]. 131. See [18-33]. 132. See, eg Esanda Finance Corp Ltd v Peat Marwick Hungerfords (Reg) (1997) 188 CLR 241 at 252. 133. [1914] AC 932. 134. For the incidents of such a relationship see [38-29]. 135. [1964] AC 465. 136. (1970) 122 CLR 628. 137. [1976] QB 801 (see [18-33]). See also Spring v Guardian Assurance Plc [1995] 2 AC 296 (see Tom Allen (1995) 58 MLR 553). 138. [1976] QB 801 at 827. 139. (1968) 122 CLR 556 at 572–3. Cf Caparo Industries Plc v Dickman [1990] 2 AC 605 at 635–6, 637– 8. 140. See L Shaddock & Associates Pty Ltd v Parramatta City Council (1981) 150 CLR 225 at 250; 36 ALR 385; San Sebastian Pty Ltd v Minister Administering the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act (1986) 162 CLR 340 at 356–7, 371; 68 ALR 161; Esanda Finance Corp Ltd v Peat Marwick Hungerfords (Reg) (1997) 188 CLR 241 at 255, 261. 141. See also Esanda Finance Corp Ltd v Peat Marwick Hungerfords (Reg) (1997) 188 CLR 241 at 265. 142. [1976] QB 801.
143. [1976] QB 801 at 820. 144. See Norris v Sibberas [1990] VR 161 at 171. 145. Cf San Sebastian Pty Ltd v Minister Administering the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act (1986) 162 CLR 340 at 358, 366. 146. See Hill (t/as R F Hill & Associates) v Van Erp (1997) 188 CLR 159 at 184; Esanda Finance Corp Ltd v Peat Marwick Hungerfords (Reg) (1997) 188 CLR 241 at 252, 256, 262, 310. Cf Smith v Bush [1990] 1 AC 831 at 871. 147. See Sutherland Shire Council v Heyman (1985) 157 CLR 424 at 486; 60 ALR 1; R Lowe Lippmann Figdor & Franck v AGC (Advances) Ltd [1992] 2 VR 671. Cf Smith v Bush [1990] 1 AC 831 at 862, 871–2; Morgan Crucible Co Plc v Hill Samuel & Co Ltd [1991] Ch 295. 148. (1981) 150 CLR 225 (see [18-35]). Contrast Argy v Blunts & Lane Cove Real Estate Pty Ltd (1990) 94 ALR 719. 149. [1964] AC 465. 150. But see [19-18]. 151. The privity rule will normally prevent reliance on an exclusion where the duty of care is owed to a person who is not a party to a contract. Cf Hill (t/as R F Hill & Associates) v Van Erp (1997) 188 CLR 159 at 181–2. But see [19-19]. 152. See, eg Norris v Sibberas [1990] VR 161 at 172. 153. (1981) 150 CLR 225. Contrast Tepko Pty Ltd v Water Board (2001) 206 CLR 1; 178 ALR 634. 154. See, eg F M B Reynolds, ‘Tort Actions in Contractual Situations’ (1985) 11 NZULR 215; Sir Robin Cooke, ‘Tort and Contract’ in Finn, ed, Essays on Contract, 1987, p 222; Jane Swanton, ‘Concurrent Liability in Tort and Contract: the Problem of Defining the Limits’ (1996) 10 JCL 21. 155. See further [11-16], [29-17], [35-04]. 156. See, eg Midland Bank Trust Co Ltd v Hett Stubbs & Kemp [1979] Ch 384; Ross v Caunters [1980] Ch 297; Hardie (Qld) Employees’ Credit Union Ltd v Hall Chadwick & Co [1980] Qd R 362; Aluminium Products (Qld) Pty Ltd v Hill [1981] Qd R 33; Henderson v Merrett Syndicates Ltd [1995] 2 AC 145 (see J D Heydon (1995) 111 LQR 1; Steve Hedley [1995] CLJ 27). Cf Giannarelli v Wraith (1988) 165 CLR 543; 81 ALR 417. 157. [1976] QB 801 (see [18-33]). See also Howard Marine and Dredging Co Ltd v A Ogden & Sons (Excavations) Ltd [1978] 1 QB 574; UBAF Ltd v European American Banking Corp [1984] QB 713. 158. Sealand of the Pacific Ltd v Ocean Cement Ltd (1973) 33 DLR (3d) 625. 159. Capital Motors Ltd v Beecham [1975] 1 NZLR 576; Walker Hobson & Hill Ltd v Johnson [1981] 2 NZLR 532 at 540. 160. See Pennant Hills Restaurants Pty Ltd v Barrell Insurances Pty Ltd [1977] 2 NSWLR 827 at 844–5; cf Simonius Vischer & Co v Holt [1979] 2 NSWLR 322 at 349–54. The point was conceded in South Australia v Johnson (1982) 42 ALR 161. 161. See [18-23]. 162. ‘Error in substantialibus sufficient to annul the whole contract’: Brownlie v Campbell (1880) 5 App Cas 925 at 937 per Lord Selborne LC. And cf New Zealand Loan and Mercantile Agency Co v Howes (1888) 4 QLJ 73; Picturesque Atlas Publishing Co Ltd v Phillipson (1890) 16 VLR 675 at 680; Hynes v Byrne (1899) 9 QLJ 154; Wilcher v Steain (1961) 79 WN (NSW) 141. 163. Reese River Silver Mining Co Ltd v Smith (1869) LR 4 HL 64 per Lord Cairns; Redgrave v Hurd (1881) 20 Ch D 1.
164. See further [18-43]–[18-46]. 165. See [18-60]–[18-62]. 166. See [18-76], Chapter 19 (impact of legislation on misleading or deceptive conduct). 167. See [18-23]–[18-24]. 168. See [18-23], [18-37]. 169. T & J Harrison v Knowles and Foster [1918] 1 KB 608. Cf Wilson v Brisbane City Council [1931] QSR 360 at 374 et seq; Wilson v Union Trustee Co (1923) 44 ALT 165; MacKenzie v Royal Bank of Canada [1934] AC 468. 170. See [18-24]. 171. For an historical perspective see Janet O’Sullivan, ‘Rescission as a Self-help Remedy: A Critical Analysis’ [2000] CLJ 509. 172. See, eg Urquhart v Macpherson (1878) 3 App Cas 831; Abram SS Co Ltd v Westville Shipping Co Ltd [1923] AC 773; Alati v Kruger (1955) 94 CLR 216. 173. See Alati v Kruger (1955) 94 CLR 216. 174. Scarf v Jardine (1882) 7 App Cas 345 at 360, 361. See also [31-05]. 175. [1965] 1 QB 525. For a statutory recognition of the case see Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic), s 26(1)(b). 176. Cf Clough v London & North Western Railway Co (1871) LR 7 Ex 26 at 34; Hunter BNZ Finance Ltd v C G Maloney Pty Ltd (1988) 18 NSWLR 420 at 420–1. 177. See further [18-44]. 178. Cf Fullers’ Theatres Ltd v Musgrove (1923) 31 CLR 524; Hodder v Watters [1946] VLR 222. 179. Cf Chapter 31 (restrictions on termination). 180. Reynell v Sprye (1852) 1 De GM & G 660 at 708; 42 ER 710 at 728 per Lord Cranworth LJ. 181. Discretionary factors influence the requirement of restitutio in integrum. See [18-45]. 182. See [18-39]–[18-41]. 183. See, eg Erlanger v New Sombrero Phosphate Co (1878) 3 App Cas 1218 at 1278, 1279; A H McDonald & Co Pty Ltd v Wells (1931) 45 CLR 506 at 513-14. But see [38-36]. 184. (1858) EB & E 148; 120 ER 463. Compare cases holding that rescission of a contract to purchase shares is not available once winding up of the company has commenced: Oakes v Turquand (1867) LR 2 HL 325; Tennent v City of Glasgow Bank (1879) 4 App Cas 615; Webb Distributors (Aust) Pty Ltd v State of Victoria (1993) 179 CLR 15; 119 ALR 577. 185. For the meaning of this expression see [38-06]. 186. Kennedy v Panama New Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Co Ltd (1867) LR 2 QB 580 at 587. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1320, 1433. 187. See [18-37]. 188. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1305, 1318. 189. See [18-24]. 190. See [18-45]. 191. See [18-60]–[18-62].
192. (1955) 94 CLR 216. 193. (1955) 94 CLR 216 at 223-4. See also Kramer v Duggan (1955) 55 SR (NSW) 385; O’Sullivan v Management Agency and Music Ltd [1985] QB 428 at 457; Demetrios v Gikas Dry Cleaning Industries Pty Ltd (1991) 22 NSWLR 561 at 573-4. 194. (1878) 3 App Cas 1218 at 1278, 1279. 195. (1924) 34 CLR 160 at 165, 169. 196. [1939] 3 All ER 271 at 279, 280. 197. (1869) LR 4 HL 64 at 73. 198. [1923] AC 773. 199. See Drozd v Vaskas [1960] SASR 88. 200. (1995) 184 CLR 102; 130 ALR 570 (see J W Carter and Gregory Tolhurst (1996) 10 JCL 167; Dominic O’Sullivan (1997) 113 LQR 16). See also David Wright, ‘Fiduciaries, Rescission and the Recent Change to the High Court’s Equity Jurisprudence’ (1998) 13 JCL 166; Andrew Robertson, ‘Partial Rescission, Causation and Benefit’ (2001) 17 JCL 163. 201. (1995) 184 CLR 102 at 112 per Deane, Dawson, Toohey, Gaudron and McHugh JJ. 202. Contrast Greater Pacific Investments Pty Ltd v Australian National Industries Ltd (1996) 39 NSWLR 143 at 151; Maguire v Makaronis (1997) 188 CLR 449. 203. (1978) 18 SASR 240. 204. (1924) 34 CLR 160. 205. See Lagunas Nitrate Co v Lagunas Syndicate [1899] 2 Ch 392 per Rigby LJ; Spence v Crawford [1939] 3 All ER 271; Evans v Benson & Co [1961] WAR 12. 206. See [18-40]. 207. Cf Reese River Silver Mining Co Ltd v Smith (1869) LR 4 HL 64 at 74; United Shoe Machinery Co of Canada v Brunet [1909] AC 330; Abram SS Co Ltd v Westville Shipping Co Ltd [1923] AC 773 at 779. For the impact of delay see [18-50]. 208. See [18-48]. 209. See [31-05]. See also [7-27] (‘waiver’). 210. Rawlins v Wickham (1858) 3 De G & J 304; 44 ER 1285. 211. See Drozd v Vaskas [1960] SASR 88 at 95-6; Hunter BNZ Finance Ltd v C G Maloney Pty Ltd (1988) 18 NSWLR 420 at 435; Re Hoffman; Ex parte Worrell v Schilling (1989) 85 ALR 145 at 150. Cf Senanayake v Cheng [1966] AC 63 at 78-9. 212. For the impact of delay see [18-50]. 213. This question arises in respect of all cases of election, and there is no reason for thinking that the answer given in the present context should be any different from the answer given in other contexts such as termination for breach or repudiation. See [31-05]. For the distinction between election between rights and election between remedies see [31-07]. 214. [1965] VR 433. 215. See also Parker v R-G [1976] 1 NSWLR 342 at 359; Hunter BNZ Finance Ltd v C G Maloney Pty Ltd (1988) 18 NSWLR 420 at 436. 216. See [31-05]. 217. See Kammins Ballrooms Co Ltd v Zenith Investments (Torquay) Ltd [1971] AC 850 at 878, 883, but
cf at 873. 218. See Evans v Benson & Co [1961] WAR 12. 219. See [31-05]. 220. (1989) 85 ALR 145 at 151-2. 221. Cf Szep v Blanken [1969] SASR 65 at 74-5; Official Receiver v Feldman (1972) 4 SASR 246 at 254, 270. 222. Elder’s Trustee and Executor Co Ltd v Commonwealth Homes and Investment Co Ltd (1941) 65 CLR 603 at 618; Sargent v ASL Developments Ltd (1974) 131 CLR 634 at 657-8; 4 ALR 257. 223. See also [7-28], [31-08]. 224. [1965] VR 433. 225. [1965] VR 433 at 443. 226. See, eg Alati v Kruger (1955) 94 CLR 216 at 223. 227. [1965] VR 433 at 443, 452. 228. See [31-18]. Cf Leaf v International Galleries [1950] 2 KB 86. 229. Clough v London & North Western Railway Co (1871) LR 7 Ex 26 at 34. 230. Cf [18-54]. 231. See, eg Academy of Health and Fitness Pty Ltd v Power [1973] VR 254. 232. Cf Cover v McLaughlin (1897) 18 LR (NSW) Eq 107. 233. As in Hudson v Jope (1914) 14 SR (NSW) 351. 234. See generally [18-43]–[18-46]. 235. Alternatively, where equitable adjustments are necessary, the representee may be barred by the defence of laches. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 2713. 236. Urquhart v Macpherson (1878) 3 App Cas 831 at 837-8; Hynes v Byrne (1899) 9 QLJ 154 at 157-8. 237. Section 6(2) of the Misrepresentation Act 1972 (SA) expressly preserves the restriction imposed by the interposition of a third party’s rights. 238. But see [20-45] (contract may be void for mistake). 239. Cf Oakes v Turquand (1867) LR 2 HL 325 (subscription for shares in a company by a fraudulent prospectus). 240. [1965] 1 QB 525 (see [18-40]). 241. See also [20-55] (mistake). 242. [1905] 1 Ch 326. 243. (1848) 1 HLC 605; 9 ER 897. 244. Thus, the rule applies to leases: Angel v Jay [1911] 1 KB 666. 245. Kramer v Duggan (1955) 55 SR (NSW) 385; and cf Cousins v Freeman (1957) 58 WALR 79. 246. Vimig Pty Ltd v Contract Tooling Pty Ltd (1986) 9 NSWLR 731. 247. See also Compagnie Francaise des Chemins de Fer Paris Orleans v Leeston Shipping Co Ltd (1919) 1 Ll L Rep 235; Edler v Auerbach [1950] 1 KB 359. 248. See [18-55].
249. See, eg H A Hammelman, ‘Seddon v North Eastern Salt Co’ (1939) 55 LQR 90. 250. Armstrong v Jackson [1917] 2 KB 822 at 825. 251. See Solle v Butcher [1950] 1 KB 671 at 695; Leaf v International Galleries [1950] 2 KB 86 at 90; Goldsmith v Rodger [1962] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 249. 252. See, eg Leaf v International Galleries [1950] 2 KB 86; Long v Lloyd [1958] 2 All ER 402. 253. See [18-43]–[18-46]. 254. See [18-47]–[18-51]. 255. See [18-52]–[18-53]. Cf New Zealand Loan and Mercantile Agency Co v Howes (1888) 4 QLJ 73. 256. [1966] AC 63 at 83. And see Hudson v Jope (1914) 14 SR (NSW) 351 (conveyance of wrong parcel — but for her affirmation, purchaser would have been entitled to rescind). 257. Compagnie Francaise des Chemins de Fer Paris Orleans v Leeston Shipping Co Ltd (1919) 1 Ll L Rep 235. 258. [1960] NZLR 756. 259. See, eg Hart v Swaine (1877) 7 Ch D 42; Wheeler v Atkinson (1925) 28 WALR 12; Angel v Jay [1911] 1 KB 666. 260. New Zealand Loan and Mercantile Agency Co v Howes (1888) 4 QLJ 73; Hudson v Jope (1914) 14 SR (NSW) 351. 261. See, eg Armstrong v Jackson [1917] 2 KB 822; Bendigo Central Freezing and Fertiliser Co Ltd v Cunningham [1919] VLR 387. 262. Leason Pty Ltd v Princes Farm Pty Ltd [1983] 2 NSWLR 381 (goods); Baird v BCE Holdings Pty Ltd (1996) 40 NSWLR 374 at 379 (shares). See also [18-56]. 263. See ACT: Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002, s 173(b)(ii); SA: Misrepresentation Act 1972, s 6(1)(b). 264. See ACT: Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002, s 173(b)(iii); SA: Misrepresentation Act 1972, s 6(1)(c). 265. See Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW), s 4(2A)(b). 266. See [10-02]–[10-10]. 267. See [30-04]. 268. See, eg Pennsylvania Shipping Co v Compagnie Nationale de Navigation [1936] 2 All ER 1167 at 1171. 269. Compagnie Francaise des Chemins de Fer Paris Orleans v Leeston Shipping Co Ltd (1919) 1 Ll L Rep 235 at 237-8; Academy of Health and Fitness Pty Ltd v Power [1973] VR 254; Simons v Zartom Investments Pty Ltd [1975] 2 NSWLR 30 at 36. 270. Although it would be unusual for it to do so, the term may still have the character of a mere representation. See [10-04]. 271. See generally [30-11]–[30-21]. 272. Alati v Kruger (1955) 94 CLR 216 at 222; Kramer v McMahon [1970] 1 NSWR 194 at 204. 273. Cf Svanosio v McNamara (1956) 96 CLR 186 at 205. 274. See Misrepresentation Act 1967 (UK), s 1(a). 275. See ACT: Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002, s 173(b)(i); SA: Misrepresentation Act 1972, s 6(1)(a). 276. See M G Bridge, ‘Misrepresentation and Merger: Sale of Land Principles and Sale of Goods Contracts’ (1985) 20 UBC LR 53 at 89ff; NSW Law Reform Commission, Report on Sale of Goods Law, LRC 51, 1987, Chapter 2.
277. See, eg Street v Blay (1831) 2 B & Ad 456; 109 ER 1212; William Tibbits & Co v Holt (1890) 16 VLR 714. 278. Cf Bannerman v White (1861) 10 CBNS 844; 142 ER 685. 279. Kennedy v Panama New Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Co Ltd (1867) LR 2 QB 580 at 587 (see [18-37]). See J C Smith, ‘The Right to Rescind for Breach of Condition in a Sale of Specific Goods under the Sale of Goods Act, 1893’ (1951) 14 MLR 173. 280. See ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 62(1); NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 4(2); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 4(2); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 61(2); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 59(2); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 5(2); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 4(2); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 59(2). 281. The wording of the provisions varies, but the substance is the same. The problem is one aspect of a wider issue of the applicability of equitable principles to sale of goods transactions. See NSW Law Reform Commission, Issues Paper on Sale of Goods, IP 5, 1988, pp 12-13; Hewett v Court (1983) 149 CLR 639; 46 ALR 87. 282. See, eg Riddiford v Warren (1901) 20 NZLR 572; Watt v Westhoven [1933] VLR 458; Holmes v Burgess [1975] 2 NZLR 311. 283. See Graham v Freer (1980) 35 SASR 424. Cf Electrical Enterprises Retail Pty Ltd v Rodgers (1988) 15 NSWLR 473. 284. See Leaf v International Galleries [1950] 2 KB 86; Long v Lloyd [1958] 2 All ER 402; Goldsmith v Rodger [1962] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 249; Leason Pty Ltd v Princes Farm Pty Ltd [1983] 2 NSWLR 381. 285. See G L Williams, ‘Language and the Law — III’ (1945) 61 LQR 293 at 302. 286. See ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 62(1A); NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 4(2A). Cf Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic), s 24 (consumer sale). 287. See [31-15]. 288. b[1950] 2 KB 86 at 90-1. Cf Long v Lloyd [1958] 2 All ER 402. 289. See JAD International Pty Ltd v International Trucks Australia Ltd (1994) 50 FCR 378 at 385 and Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 2323. 290. A similar reform is recommended by the Law Reform Commission of Western Australia, Report on the Sale of Goods Act 1895, Project No 89, 1998. See J W Carter, ‘Sale of Goods Reform in Western Australia’ (1999) 15 JCL 58. 291. See [18-39]–[18-41]. 292. Sibley v Grosvenor (1916) 21 CLR 469 per Griffith CJ; Munchies Management Pty Ltd v Belperio (1988) 84 ALR 700 at 710. 293. See [18-28]. 294. See, eg O’Keefe v Taylor Estates Co Ltd [1916] St R Qd 301; Evans v Benson & Co [1961] WAR 12; Williams v Moore [1963] SR (NSW) 765. 295. See [18-71]–[18-72]. 296. Cf Daniel Friedmann, ‘Valid, Voidable, Qualified, and Non-existing Obligations: An Alternative Perspective on the Law of Restitution’ in Burrows, ed, Essays on the Law of Restitution, 1991, p 262. See generally Chapter 38. 297. See, eg Erlanger v New Sombrero Phosphate Co (1878) 3 App Cas 1218 per Lord Blackburn; Newbigging v Adam (1886) 34 Ch D 582 (affirmed sub nom Adam v Newbigging (1888) 13 App Cas 308); Kramer v McMahon [1970] 1 NSWR 194 at 206; Sargent v Campbell [1972-73] ALR 708.
298. See generally [18-29]–[18-36]. 299. See [18-73] and generally Chapter 19. 300. See, eg Munchies Management Pty Ltd v Belperio (1988) 84 ALR 700 at 707. 301. (1789) 3 TR 51 at 56; 100 ER 450 at 453. 302. Australasian Brokerage Ltd v ANZ Banking Corp Ltd (1934) 52 CLR 430. 303. Howell v Bennett & Fisher Ltd [1966] SASR 188. 304. See, eg Hawkins v Clayton (1988) 164 CLR 539. Cf UBAF Ltd v European American Banking Corp [1984] QB 713. 305. (1992) 175 CLR 514; 109 ALR 247. Although decided by reference to a cause of action for misleading or deceptive conduct prohibited by statute (see Chapter 19), the same rules apply to cases of fraud. See also Law Society v Sephton & Co (a firm) [2006] 2 AC 543 (negligence). 306. (1996) 41 NSWLR 700 at 705, 711. See also Pullen v Gutteridge Haskins & Davey Pty Ltd [1993] 1 VR 27 at 66-71. 307. See Gould v Vaggelas (1984) 157 CLR 215 at 220; Smith New Court Securities Ltd v Citibank NA [1997] AC 254. 308. The statutory provisions apportioning responsibility on the basis of contributory negligence (see [3529]) will usually not apply to cases of fraud: Alliance & Leicester Building Society v Edgestop Ltd [1993] 1 WLR 1462; Standard Chartered Bank v Pakistan National Shipping Corp (Nos 2 and 4) [2003] 1 AC 959 at 967. 309. The criterion for remoteness may be more generous in tort than contract. See [35-26]. 310. See South Australia v Johnson (1982) 42 ALR 161 at 169-70. 311. See, eg Neal v Ayers (1940) 63 CLR 524; Monroe Schneider Associates (Inc) v No 1 Raberem Pty Ltd (1991) 104 ALR 397 at 412. 312. Clark v Urquhart [1930] AC 28 at 68; Doyle v Olby (Ironmongers) Ltd [1969] 2 QB 158; Smith New Court Securities Ltd v Citibank NA [1997] AC 254 (see Jennifer Payne [1997] CLJ 17); Roger Halson [1997] LMCLQ 423. Cf Gould v Vaggelas (1984) 157 CLR 215 at 221; Marks v GIO Australia Holdings Ltd (1998) 196 CLR 494 at 512; 158 ALR 333. 313. See also Toteff v Antonas (1952) 87 CLR 647 at 650; Wardley Australia Ltd v State of Western Australia (1992) 175 CLR 514 at 530. 314. (1940) 64 CLR 282 at 297. See also Toteff v Antonas (1952) 87 CLR 647 at 650-1; Gould v Vaggelas (1984) 157 CLR 215 at 220-1, 242-3, 254-5. 315. [1916] St R Qd 301. 316. Cf Cooke v Caldwell’s Wines Ltd (1925) 25 SR (NSW) 161; Selman v Minogue (1937) 37 SR (NSW) 280; Nicholls v Taylor [1939] VLR 119; Evans v Benson & Co [1961] WAR 12. 317. (1907) 4 CLR 1692. 318. See [35-04]. 319. (1907) 4 CLR 1692 at 1709. 320. See Sellars v Adelaide Petroleum NL (1994) 179 CLR 332; 120 ALR 16, especially at 335 where the standard of proof is explained. Cf East v Maurer [1991] 1 WLR 461 (see Jonathan Marks (1992) 108 LQR 386; Simon Evans (1993) 6 JCL 73); Clef Aquitaine SARL v Laporte Materials (Barrow) Ltd [2001] QB 488. 321. And subject to the points in [18-68] concerning causation and remoteness.
322. See generally D W McLauchlan, ‘A Damages Dilemma’ (1997) 12 JCL 114; Brian Coote, ‘Is there Hope, Still, for Negligent Valuers?’ (1997) 12 JCL 145. See also [18-71], [18-72], [35-04]. 323. See [35-04], [35-26]. 324. [1997] AC 191 (see D W McLauchlan (1997) 113 LQR 421; Janet O’Sullivan [1997] CLJ 19; Jane Stapleton (1997) 113 LQR 1; John Wightman (1998) 61 MLR 68). 325. (1999) 199 CLR 413; 163 ALR 611 (see D W McLauchlan and C E F Rickett (2000) 116 LQR 1). 326. Potts v Miller (1940) 64 CLR 282. For the relevant date see Saunders v Edwards [1987] 1 WLR 1116. 327. (1952) 87 CLR 647. 328. Potts v Miller (1940) 64 CLR 282. But cf [18-69] (position of negligent valuer). 329. Toteff v Antonas (1952) 87 CLR 647 at 650; Alati v Kruger (1955) 94 CLR 216 at 222; Wardley Australia Ltd v State of Western Australia (1992) 175 CLR 514 at 530. 330. But cf Wehr v Thom [1969] WAR 39; Snarski & Snarski v Barbarich [1969] WAR 46. And contrast Contractual Remedies Act 1979 (NZ), s 6. 331. See Holmes v Jones (1907) 4 CLR 1692. 332. See [18-71]. 333. See [36-13]–[36-17]. 334. See Howell v Bennett & Fisher Ltd [1966] SASR 189. On the concept of ‘nominal’ damages see [3506]. 335. See [18-74]–[18-78]. 336. See Chapter 19. 337. Prompted by the Tenth Report of the Law Reform Committee, Cmd 1782, 1962. See Ian Brown and Adrian Chandler, ‘Deceit, Damages and the Misrepresentation Act 1967, s 2(1)’ [1992] LMCLQ 40. See also Alexander Trukhtanov, ‘Misrepresentation: Acknowledgement of Non-reliance as a Defence’ (2009) 125 LQR 648. 338. See also WA Law Reform Commission, Report on Innocent Misrepresentation, Project No 22, 1973. 339. See s 4(1). 340. See s 177(1). 341. See ACT: Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002, s 175; SA: Misrepresentation Act 1972, s 7(3). 342. See ACT: Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002, s 174; SA: Misrepresentation Act 1972, s 7(1). 343. See [18-77]. 344. Cf Strover v Harrington [1988] Ch 390 (knowledge of agent fatal). 345. See [18-78]. 346. As under the Contractual Remedies Act 1979 (NZ), which assimilates the remedies for breach of contract and pre-contract misrepresentation. 347. But the plaintiff does not plead fraud as the basis for the claim: Garden Neptune Shipping Ltd v Occidental Worldwide Investment Corp [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 330 (see Richard Hooley (1991) 107 LQR 31). 348. But cf William Sindall Plc v Cambridgeshire County Council [1994] 1 WLR 1016 at 1037, 1045 (see Hugh Beale (1995) 111 LQR 60; A J Oakley [1995] CLJ 17). On the relevance of contributory negligence see Crawford v Parish (1991) 105 FLR 361 at 367; Gran Gelato Ltd v Richcliff (Group)
Ltd [1992] Ch 560 (see Peter Cane (1992) 108 LQR 539; Adrian Chandler and Stephen Higgins [1994] LMCLQ 326); Alliance & Leicester Building Society v Edgestop Ltd [1993] 1 WLR 1462. 349. The discussion in [18-66]–[18-72] applies. 350. See [18-68]. 351. See Royscot Trust Ltd v Rogerson [1991] 2 QB 297; William Sindall Plc v Cambridge-shire County Council [1994] 1 WLR 1016. Cf Crawford v Parish (1991) 105 FLR 361 at 366. For commentary see A J Oakley [1992] CLJ 9; John Wadsley (1992) 55 MLR 698. 352. See [18-78]. 353. See generally [18-25]–[18-27]. 354. See [18-25]. 355. See generally [18-29]–[18-36]. 356. See ACT: Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002, s 174(3)(a); SA: Misrepresentation Act 1972, s 7(2)(a). The defence is not applicable to a claim for rescission and consequential relief: Graham v Freer (1980) 35 SASR 424.
[page 418]
Chapter 19
Misleading Conduct under Statute [19-01] Introduction. Section 18 of the Australian Consumer Law provides that a ‘person must not, in trade or commerce, engage in conduct that is misleading or deceptive or is likely to mislead or deceive’. The provision establishes a norm of conduct which regulates commercial behaviour. It replaces s 52 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth),1 which expressed the prohibition in the same terms. The prohibition has had a significant impact on contract law in general,2 but particularly in situations where previously the law as to misrepresentation might have provided a remedy.3 Extensive remedies are available under the Australian Consumer Law for contravention of the prohibition on misleading or deceptive conduct.
General [19-02] New law. As noted earlier,4 the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) was renamed the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) as part of the reforms under which the Australian Consumer Law became law. Since s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law (replacing s 52 of the Trade Practices Act) has been in place for a relatively short time, all the cases referred to in this chapter were decisions on s 52 (or corresponding provisions in the fair trading legislation of the States and Territories). And the remedies granted were similarly referable to provisions of the Trade Practices Act (or fair trading legislation). Except in two respects, all those cases remain applicable authorities. First, the approach under the Australian Consumer Law to representations in relation to ‘future matters’ may be different from the Trade Practices Act. Second, the remedial provisions are drafted differently under the Australian Consumer Law. Whether the law has changed in relation to either matter remains to be seen.
[page 419] [19-03] Misleading or deceptive conduct and financial services. Misleading or deceptive conduct in relation to financial services is regulated by s 12DA of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cth). The Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cth) also regulates remedies for misleading or deceptive conduct in relation to financial services. [19-04] ‘In trade or commerce’. One limiting factor on s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law is that it applies only to conduct which occurs ‘in trade or commerce’. This phrase makes it clear that the prohibition applies only to those acting in a business capacity, rather than in a purely private capacity. Sometimes it is difficult to decide whether conduct is occurring ‘in’ trade or commerce,5 but the borderline cases generally arise in other than contractual contexts. However, s 18 is not limited to conduct occurring in the normal course of a trader’s business. For example, the sale by a corporation of its only capital asset may be conduct in trade or commerce, and consequently a company selling its beauty salon business was held to be acting in trade or commerce, even though it was not in the business of buying and selling such assets.6 By way of contrast, the sale by an individual of a non-business asset (for example, the family home) is not in trade or commerce.7 Where a financial institution such as a bank gives information, that conduct may be in trade or commerce even though the information is given to someone not a customer of the bank.8 [19-05] Misleading or deceptive conduct. ‘To mislead’ means ‘to lead into error’. ‘Deceive’ does not seem to add anything to this. It is not necessary to show any intention to mislead or deceive. The criterion is what the person alleged to have engaged in the conduct led the other person to understand, rather than what understanding the conduct was intended to convey.9 This is to be gathered from a consideration of the ‘conduct … viewed as a whole’.10 The failure of the person alleging misleading or deceptive conduct to make reasonable inquiries is a relevant consideration.11 Section 18 of the Australian Consumer Law prohibits conduct having (or capable of having) the stated result. Liability for contravention of the [page 420]
prohibition is therefore a strict liability.12 Negligence or moral blameworthiness is not necessary. Indeed, it is not essential for any person to have been misled or deceived, so long as the conduct has a real capacity (though not merely a remote possibility) to do so. Evidence of deception may be persuasive, but this is not essential or conclusive, the question of whether particular conduct is misleading or deceptive being ultimately one for the court itself to determine in an objective manner.13 In Campomar Sociedad Limitada v Nike International Ltd14 the High Court said that in cases of representations made to the public regard must be had to ‘ordinary’ or ‘reasonable’ members of the class of prospective purchasers addressed. So, just as in advertising cases a vulnerable group may apparently be misled where a more sophisticated or expert group might not, so also the characteristics and vulnerabilities (at least where known to the other party) of an individual engaged in contract negotiations may be taken into account when determining whether or not a representation made during those negotiations was misleading.15 [19-06] Misleading or deceptive conduct and consumers. Section 52 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) was not limited to ‘consumers’.16 Notwithstanding its title, nor is s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law. Section 18 does not incorporate or rely on the definition of ‘consumer’ considered earlier.17 Accordingly, s 18 is not limited to conduct directed to consumers, or situations involving consumers. It applies to the negotiation of many purely commercial transactions. The approach adopted reflects the view that consumer protection policy will best be effectuated through a general ban on misleading conduct in the marketplace, irrespective of whether the interests of any individual consumer are directly affected in any particular case. Moreover, although the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has significant enforcement powers under the Australian Consumer Law, most of the cases on misleading or deceptive conduct have involved private claims, such as by a trade rival of the defendant (attacking, for example, allegedly misleading advertising of a competitor) or by a disgruntled party to a commercial contract complaining of misleading representations allegedly made during negotiation of the contract. [19-07] Literal truth, the overall impression and puffery. A statement may be misleading or deceptive although literally true. ‘Half[page 421]
truths’ and ambiguities may result in deception.18 The overall impression created by the conduct is what matters. This is particularly true where contractual negotiations extend over a period of time.19 Conduct which might at first sight appear to be a misrepresentation has been held to be mere puffery, not attracting legal consequences.20 Similarly, ‘puffery’ may be a defence to a claim that s 18 the Australian Consumer Law has been contravened. But the more specific and precise (and thus capable of being proved to be true or false) a statement is, the more likely it is that the defence of puffery will fail.21 The defence that a seller’s claim is only puffery, not to be taken seriously and not attracting liability, is less likely to succeed under the statutory prohibition than under the general law. Nonetheless, there have been indications of some judicial disquiet that s 18 liability may at times too readily attach in commercial transactions, that some restraint is called for, and that ‘in the ordinary course of commercial dealings, a certain amount of “puffing” or exaggeration is to be expected’.22 [19-08] Promises, predictions and opinions. For conduct to be misleading or deceptive it must involve, at least by implication, a representation as to some past or present fact.23 While this conclusion may impose a slight gloss on the statutory language,24 one well-established consequence is that the mere fact that a promise is not fulfilled or that a prediction or promise proves to be incorrect does not involve the speaker in a contravention of s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law.25 Similarly, the expression of an opinion cannot of itself be misleading or deceptive conduct.26 However, the distinctions between promises and statements of opinion and representations of fact are influenced by the approach taken under the common law to misrepresentation.27 A person who makes a promise or expresses an opinion may also have impliedly made a representation as to a present fact. If the implied representation is misleading, s 18 will have been contravened. For example, in Global Sportsman Pty Ltd v Mirror Newspapers Ltd28 the Full Federal Court said: [page 422] A statement which involves the state of mind of the maker ordinarily conveys the meaning (expressly or by implication) that the maker of the statement had a particular state of mind when the statement was made and, commonly at least, that there was basis for that state of mind.
Therefore, a statement which is expressed as an opinion which the maker of the statement says has not been substantiated is not misleading if believed to be true.29 The evidentiary burden for applicants relying on a representation as to the future is eased by s 4 of the Australian Consumer Law. Section 4(1) provides that if a person makes a representation with respect to any future matter, and the person does not have reasonable grounds for making the representation, the representation is taken to be misleading. Section 4(2) then states: (2) For the purposes of applying subsection (1) in relation to a proceeding concerning a representation made with respect to a future matter by: (a) a party to the proceeding; or (b) any other person; the party or other person is taken not to have had reasonable grounds for making the representation, unless evidence is adduced to the contrary.
Although the impact is to make it easier to prove misleading or deceptive conduct in relation to a future matter, s 4(3)(b) states to ‘avoid doubt’ that s 4(2) does not have the effect of placing on any person an onus of proving that the person who made the representation had reasonable grounds for making the representation. This is intended to make clear that the onus of proof is not reversed where a representation with respect to a future matter is made and alleged to be misleading.30 The onus of establishing the falsity of any implied representations therefore rests on the applicant. Nonetheless, claims based on expressions of opinions may well succeed, either because it is established that the speaker did not in fact hold the opinion or, in many cases, because there was no reasonable basis for it.31 [19-09] Breach of contract as misleading or deceptive conduct.32 A majority of the Full Federal Court held in Accounting Systems 2000 (Developments) Pty Ltd v CCH Australia Ltd33 that the mere giving of a contractual warranty as to a presently existing state of affairs may, if false, amount to misleading or deceptive conduct. [page 423] The mere performance of a contract does not carry with it a representation that the contract was being properly performed.34 However, a false representation that a party had the proper competence and skill to carry out a contract may be
misleading or deceptive conduct.35 [19-10] Silence and misleading or deceptive conduct. Under the general law, subject to limited exceptions, mere silence — the failure to disclose facts — is not a representation.36 In some cases, a failure to speak may amount to misleading or deceptive conduct in contravention of s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law, even though in the same circumstances there might not be an actionable misrepresentation at common law.37 The absence of a duty of disclosure under the general law is relevant in determining whether non-disclosure is misleading or deceptive conduct. At least generally, a failure to reveal facts will not be misleading unless the circumstances are such as to give rise to a reasonable expectation that the existence of a relevant fact would be disclosed.38 In those circumstances, a failure to disclose may be misleading, but only where the person who has not disclosed a fact actually knew of the relevant fact and chose not to disclose it.39 It is difficult to predict just when the courts will infer a reasonable expectation that if certain facts existed they would be disclosed.40 Courts have on the whole been wary of holding that a failure to disclose a fact which would not have been a misrepresentation under the general law is misleading or deceptive conduct.41 In the context of contractual negotiations, s 18 should not be applied so as to impose inhibitions on commercial negotiations. As a general rule, the provision ‘does not require a party to commercial negotiations to volunteer information which will be of assistance to the decision-making of the other party’.42 [page 424]
The Statutory Remedies [19-11] The impact of the prohibition. The combination of the breadth of s 52 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) and the liberal remedies available under the Act has had a profound impact on the law of contract. The position is no different under the Australian Consumer Law. For the most part this is because reliance on the remedial provisions will often allow relief not available under general contract law principles. Contractual damages are available only where a term of the contract has been breached. Unless there is the breach of a duty of care, damages are not recoverable under
the general law in respect of an innocent misrepresentation.43 The impact of s 18 is to create a statutory right to damages for innocent misrepresentation. Many difficulties under the common law can be largely overcome by resort to the statutory remedies.44 For example: Intention to contract45 is irrelevant in a claim based on misleading or deceptive conduct. The parol evidence rule and merger, disclaimer or integration clauses46 do not oust s 18 (though the latter must be taken into account).47 The strict approach adopted towards collateral contracts48 does not limit a claim for misleading or deceptive conduct. It is not necessary under s 18 to establish the dishonest intention which is an essential element of the tort of deceit.49 It is not necessary to establish the breach of a duty of care, so that damages for misleading or deceptive conduct can be recovered without resort to the difficulties50 in establishing the duty of care necessary for the tort of negligent misrepresentation.51 [19-12] Injunctions. An injunction may be granted under s 232 of the Australian Consumer Law in respect of misleading or deceptive conduct.52 The ability to obtain an injunction against a competitor has reduced the importance of the common law tort of passing off.53 The remedy has little impact as an alternative to actions based on contract. However, it can be useful in certain circumstances, such as if [page 425] conduct in breach of a franchise or distribution agreement is also misleading or deceptive.54 [19-13] Damages. There is a statutory right to damages for misleading or deceptive conduct under s 236 of the Australian Consumer Law.55 Section 236(1) states: (1) If: (a) a person (the claimant) suffers loss or damage because of the conduct of another person; and (b) the conduct contravened a provision of Chapter 2 or 3; the claimant may recover the amount of the loss or damage by action against that other person, or
against any person involved in the contravention.
The reference to Chapters 2 and 3 of the Australian Consumer Law shows that the provision is also applicable to other classes of prohibited conduct, including unconscionable conduct.56 Suffering of loss or damage is an essential element of the cause of action.57 Purely nominal damages cannot be awarded in a s 236 claim.58 Therefore, it is not sufficient merely to prove contravention of s 18. The test of applicability of s 236 is causation. Even if misleading or deceptive conduct is established, an action for damages under s 236 will fail if the applicant is unable to prove that the conduct caused loss or damage.59 For example, a person who enters into a disadvantageous contract will have no claim if the conduct relied on as misleading or deceptive conduct did not in fact contribute to the decision to enter into the contract. However, misleading or deceptive conduct need not be the sole factor inducing the contract.60 Where it can be proved that contravention of s 18 was a cause of loss or damage, such as entry into a disadvantageous contract, that will generally be sufficient to make the defendant liable for all the loss or damage suffered.61 But if a discrete part of the plaintiff ’s loss or damage is wholly attributable to some independent cause, there will be no entitlement to damages in respect of that part of the loss or damage.62 It appears that the onus is on the defendant to establish that a component of the loss or [page 426] damage alleged by the plaintiff was not referable to the conduct complained of.63 However, direct evidence of inducement is not essential, and as is the case at common law in actions in damages for deceit, if the misleading representation was likely to induce entry into a contract which is disadvantageous, an inference of reliance is likely to be drawn unless the defendant shows that other relevant circumstances existed.64 Although a failure to take steps to check the veracity of a representation does not per se prevent recovery, in some circumstances such a failure may break the causal link between contravention and loss.65 [19-14] Measure of damages. Section 236 of the Australian Consumer Law66 does not state how damages are to be assessed. The High Court has held that the tortious measure of damages is appropriate in most, if not all, cases involving
misleading or deceptive conduct.67 Under this approach the question in a claim under the Australian Consumer Law is how much ‘worse off ’ the applicant is as a result of the contravention, rather than whether ‘the non-attainment of a benefit or the non-realisation of a profit’68 has resulted in a loss of bargain (‘expectation loss’).69 The approach was applied in Marks v GIO Australia Holdings Ltd.70 It was held that the remedy under (what is now) s 236 should be available only to those who are worse off as a result of reliance on misleading or deceptive conduct.71 McHugh, Hayne and Callinan JJ said72 ‘we do not accept that a person suffers injury simply because a hoped for advantage does not materialise’. Gaudron and Gummow JJ agreed that on the facts of the case the plaintiffs could not recover, but reached this conclusion on the basis of causation. The circumstances were that the appellants borrowed money from the GIO group of companies. Interest on the loan was to be [page 427] charged at a specified base rate plus a margin. This margin was initially fixed at 1.25 per cent. However, the contract terms conferred on the GIO the right to vary the margin by notice. Subsequently, GIO proposed to increase the margin to 2.25 per cent. A GIO brochure stated that the margin was ‘set at a margin of 1.25 per cent’. This representation that the rate was fixed, being contrary to the terms of the contracts which were signed, was misleading or deceptive conduct. However, when the GIO exercised its contractual right to vary the margin, it permitted the appellants to refinance their facilities without penalty. Since the evidence established that the loan, even with the margin increased, was more beneficial than any other loan that was available, the applicants suffered no loss. Although the normal measure of damages is therefore a reliance loss,73 that will not necessarily be less than an amount assessed on an expectation basis.74 Moreover, a claim can be made for consequential loss.75 For example, if it can be proved that, in reliance on misleading conduct, a person refrained from making a different and profitable contract, the loss of the chance of making that profit can be recovered.76 Where the loss or damage is of a kind which cannot be precisely estimated, the court must do the best it can, even if a certain amount of speculation is involved.77 Damages under s 236 are not limited to purely financial loss, but may include
damages for injury to reputation or for disappointment or mental distress.78 But because the approach to assessment of damages is based on compensation, exemplary damages cannot be recovered.79 Section 236(2) states that the limitation period for damages claims under s 236 is six years. As the cause of action contains as an element the suffering of loss or damage, the period commences to run from the time when that occurs.80 [19-15] Damages against a ‘person involved’. One final aspect of s 236 of the Australian Consumer Law which should be noted is that it allows recovery not just against the person who actually contravened s 18 [page 428] (or other relevant prohibition) but also against a ‘person involved in the contravention’. Section 2(1) states:81 (1) a person is involved, in a contravention of a provision of this Schedule or in conduct that constitutes such a contravention, if the person: (a) has aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or (c) has been in any way, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in, or party to, the contravention; or (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.
This provision extends the range of people who can be made personally liable for a contravention of s 18. However, whereas liability for contravention of s 18 is strict, only persons shown to have had knowledge of the essential elements constituting the contravention can be held liable as a ‘person involved’ in a contravention.82 [19-16] Other orders. In addition to the remedies already discussed, the effect of ss 237 and 243 of the Australian Consumer Law83 is to permit a court to make a wide variety of orders against a person who was engaged in conduct in contravention of a prohibition in the Australian Consumer Law, including the prohibition on misleading or deceptive conduct stated in s 18.84 Section 237(1)(a) provides that a court may ‘make such order or orders as the court thinks appropriate against the person who engaged in the conduct, or a person involved in that conduct’. Such a claim must be commenced within six years.85 The bases on which they may be made are, as stated in s 237(2):
to compensate the injured person in whole or in part for the loss or damage; or to prevent or reduce the loss or damage suffered, or likely to be suffered, by the injured person. Section 243 sets out examples of the kinds of orders that may be made under s 237(1). These are quite wide-ranging in scope and include an order declaring the whole or any part of a contract to be void (para (a)), an order varying a contract (para (b)), an order refusing to enforce any or all of the provisions of a contract (para (c)), an order directing the refund of money or return of property (para (d)), an order for the payment of the amount of loss or damage suffered by a person (para (e)), an order directing the repair of goods (para (f)) or the supply of specified services (para (g)). [page 429] These provisions give the courts a very wide discretion.86 Where orders for monetary compensation are made, a similar approach to that taken in assessing s 236 damages is to be taken, except that s 237 extends to situations where loss has not yet occurred but is ‘likely’ to be suffered and the orders may be designed to ‘prevent or reduce’ loss.87 In relation to the corresponding provisions of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), by far the most common application in relation to a contract induced by misleading or deceptive conduct was the making of orders declaring the contract void and, where appropriate, ordering the return of money or property. Such orders have the effect of rescinding the contract. One consequence of the court having a discretion in relation to other orders is that in deciding whether or not to set aside the contract the court is not bound by (although it will have regard to) the limitations arising under the general law on the right to rescind for misrepresentation.88 The courts have been reluctant to make orders which would amount to forms of specific performance of a contract.89 [19-17] Limitations on scope of other orders. Notwithstanding the broad discretions conferred by the Australian Consumer Law in relation to the making of orders other than damages under s 236, in some areas the Australian Consumer Law does not override established principles.90 In Webb Distributors (Aust) Pty Ltd v Victoria,91 the question was whether shareholders in certain building societies were prevented by the winding up of
those societies from rescinding their contracts for the purchase of shares, or recovering damages, on the basis of alleged fraudulent representation. It was held that on the basis of the rule in Houldsworth v City of Glasgow Bank,92 given statutory recognition in the Companies (Victoria) Code, such relief was not available once a company was wound up. It was further held, in response to an argument based on an alleged contravention of s 52 of the Trade Practices Act, that the Act was not to be seen as eliminating ‘by a sidewind’ the detailed provisions established for more than 100 years to govern the winding up of a company. The majority further commented that in Trade Practices Commission v Milreis Pty Ltd93 Brennan and Deane JJ ‘made it clear that s 87(2)(a) is not to be understood as conferring a power to declare void a contract which was valid at its inception, other than through the operation of some other provision of the Trade Practices Act or by reason of some alteration in circumstances’. The same is true under ss 237 and 243 of the Australian Consumer Law. [page 430] The Full Federal Court has however held94 that the observations in Webb Distributors should be regarded as having been overtaken by the decision in Marks v GIO Australia Holdings Ltd.95 However, suggestions in other cases that the High Court has departed by inference from its prior decisions have consistently been rejected by the High Court.96
Disclaimers, Exclusion and Acknowledgment and Merger Clauses [19-18] Disclaimers. Where a representation is made which, taken by itself, would be misleading or deceptive, a contemporaneous and prominent disclaimer is relevant to characterisation of the conduct as misleading or deceptive conduct.97 However, in relation to contravention of the misleading or deceptive conduct prohibition (now stated) in s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law, courts have shown considerable reluctance to hold that disclaimers contained in pointof-sale signs or product labels are sufficiently prominent and compelling to prevent conduct which is misleading or deceptive conduct being characterised otherwise.98
Nevertheless, in Butcher v Lachlan Elder Realty Pty Ltd99 an estate agent was held by the High Court to have effectively disclaimed liability for a statement in a brochure concerning the boundary of a property. The majority considered100 that, in the circumstances, the ‘agent did no more than communicate what the vendor was representing, without adopting it or endorsing it’. The conclusion was based not simply on the terms of the brochure but also by considering the ‘nature of the parties, the character of the transaction contemplated, and the contents of the brochure itself ’.101 Having regard to those matters, the majority considered102 ‘it would have been plain to a reasonable purchaser that the agent was not the source of the information which was said to be misleading’. Where the disclaimer occurs after the conduct complained of as being misleading or deceptive conduct, the disclaimer is relevant to proof of causation.103 [page 431] [19-19] Exclusion clauses. At common law, clauses excluding or limiting liability for innocent misrepresentation are effective according to their terms in relation to innocent misrepresentation.104 If intended to apply to fraud they are ineffective, because a clause purporting to exempt a person from liability for fraud is contrary to public policy.105 It is well established that exclusion clauses are not effective to exclude liability for a contravention of s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law, nor can they limit liability, for example, by placing a monetary cap on liability for damages.106 As an example, in Byers v Dorotea Pty Ltd107 purchasers of home units purported to rescind contracts of purchase on the grounds of innocent misrepresentation. It was held that this claim failed, partly because of an exclusion clause in the contract, but the purchasers nonetheless obtained relief based on a contravention of the prohibition on misleading or deceptive conduct. A variety of reasons have been given for this result, but perhaps the most convincing is that on public policy grounds the courts will not allow the norm of conduct established in the public interest by s 18 to be evaded. Where a clause purports to exclude or limit liability it will be void. In addition, the mere use of such a clause may contravene s 29(1)(m) of the Australian Consumer Law,108 which prohibits false or misleading representations ‘concerning the existence, exclusion or effect of any condition, warranty, guarantee, right or remedy
(including a guarantee under Division 1 of Part 3-2)’. Civil sanctions apply. But the making of such a representation may also lead to criminal sanctions.109 [19-20] Acknowledgment and merger clauses. Many clauses seek not so much directly to exclude liability as to avoid the operation of s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law by providing evidence of some factual matter which would be relevant to proof of misleading or deceptive conduct. For example, a contract for the purchase of goods might include an acknowledgment that the goods are in accordance with the contract, and that no representations not recorded in the written contract were made. Similarly, a lease of a shop in a shopping centre might include an acknowledgment that no representations other than those recorded in the lease or acknowledgment were made or that, if made, they were not relied upon by the lessee. [page 432] A suitably drafted clause may be of evidentiary value in establishing that no representation such as is alleged to have been made was made. Alternatively, it may establish that in fact there was no reliance on the conduct, and therefore loss or damage was not suffered as a result of any contravention of s 18 that may be proved. But such clauses are not conclusive. It seems likely that an acknowledgment clause contained in a standard form contract and not specifically drawn to the attention of the party sought to be affected will have no effect.110 The practice appears to have grown up in some cases of lessees in shopping centres being required to sign a ‘deed of acknowledgment’ as a document quite separate from the lease agreement. Such documents are more likely to have some evidentiary effect, but even they will be subjected to close scrutiny.111 1.
See Healey and Terry, Misleading and Deceptive Conduct, 1991; Lockhart, The Law of Misleading or Deceptive Conduct, 2nd ed, 2003.
2.
See generally David Harland, ‘The Statutory Prohibition of Misleading or Deceptive Conduct in Australia and its Impact on the Law of Contract’ (1995) 111 LQR 100.
3.
The Australian Consumer Law prohibits other conduct as well. See Chapter 24 (unconscionable conduct).
4.
See [1-21].
5.
Concrete Constructions (NSW) Pty Ltd v Nelson (1990) 169 CLR 594; 92 ALR 193. See D Harland, ‘Misleading or Deceptive Conduct: The Breadth and Limitations of the Prohibition’ (1991) 4 JCL 107.
6.
Bevanere Pty Ltd v Lubidineuse (1985) 59 ALR 334.
7.
O’Brien v Smolonogov (1983) 53 ALR 107; Argy v Blunts of Lane Cove Real Estate Pty Ltd (1990) 94 ALR 719.
8.
Menhaden v Citibank NA (1984) 55 ALR 709.
9.
See Wright v TNT Management Pty Ltd (1989) 15 NSWLR 679 at 683; 85 ALR 442.
10.
Butcher v Lachlan Elder Realty Pty Ltd (2004) 218 CLR 592 at 605; 212 ALR 357 at 367; [2004] HCA 60 at [39] per Gleeson CJ, Hayne and Heydon JJ. See also Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Telstra Corp Ltd (ACN 051 775 556) (2007) 244 ALR 470 at 494; [2007] FCA 1904 at [116].
11.
Miller & Associates Insurance Broking Pty Ltd v BMW Australia Finance Ltd (2010) 241 CLR 357 at 385; 270 ALR 204 at 224; [2010] HCA 31 at [91].
12.
See, eg Miller & Associates Insurance Broking Pty Ltd v BMW Australia Finance Ltd (2010) 241 CLR 357 at 386; 270 ALR 204 at 225; [2010] HCA 31 at [99].
13.
See in particular Parkdale Custom Built Furniture Pty Ltd v Puxu Pty Ltd (1982) 149 CLR 191; 42 ALR 1; Taco Co of Australia Inc v Taco Bell Pty Ltd (1982) 42 ALR 177; Arcric Investments Pty Ltd v Ductline Pty Ltd (1992) ATPR 41-180.
14.
(2000) 202 CLR 45; 169 ALR 677.
15.
Lockhart J appeared to take this approach in Finucane v NSW Egg Corp (1988) 80 ALR 486. Query whether the maker of the representation must be aware of the idiosyncrasies of the other.
16.
See Concrete Constructions (NSW) Pty Ltd v Nelson (1990) 169 CLR 594. See further D Harland, ‘Misleading or Deceptive Conduct: The Breadth and Limitations of the Prohibition’ (1991) 4 JCL 107 at 115–17.
17.
See [11-27].
18.
See Janssen Pharmaceutical Pty Ltd v Pfizer Pty Ltd (1986) ATPR 40-654; Telstra Corp Ltd v Optus Communications Pty Ltd (1997) ATPR 41-541.
19.
See Pappas v Soulac Pty Ltd (1983) 50 ALR 231.
20.
See [18-07].
21.
See Dewhirst & Kay Rent-A-Car Pty Ltd v Budget Rent-A-Car System Pty Ltd (1985) 8 FCR 1 (claim to be leader in rental car market for luxury cars misleading as rival company in fact had larger share of that market).
22.
General Newspapers Pty Ltd v Telstra Corp (1993) 117 ALR 629 at 642.
23.
See in particular Global Sportsman Pty Ltd v Mirror Newspapers Ltd (1984) 55 ALR 25.
24.
See, eg Adelaide Petroleum NL v Poseidon Ltd (1988) ATPR 40-901; Holt v Biroka (1988) 13 NSWLR 629; Hunt Contracting Co Pty Ltd v Roebuck Resources NL (1992) 110 ALR 183. Cf Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Fortescue Metals Group Ltd (2011) 274 ALR 731 at 767; [2011] FCAFC 19 at [111] (no dichotomy).
25.
See, eg Bill Acceptance Corp Ltd v GWA Ltd (1983) 50 ALR 242.
26.
Campbell v Backoffice Investments Pty Ltd (2009) 238 CLR 304 at 323; 257 ALR 610 at 624; [2009] HCA 25 at [39].
27.
See [18-08]–[18-09].
28.
(1984) 55 ALR 25 at 31.
29.
Campbell v Backoffice Investments Pty Ltd (2009) 238 CLR 304 at 345; 257 ALR 610 at 642; [2009]
HCA 25 at [115]. 30.
The differences between s 4 of the Australian Consumer Law and s 51A of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) (which it replaces) must be kept in mind when considering the cases on s 51A and corresponding provisions of the fair trading legislation. See, eg North East Equity Pty Ltd v Proud Nominees Pty Ltd (2012) 285 ALR 217; [2012] FCAFC 1.
31.
See, eg Bateman v Slayter (1987) 71 ALR 553; RAIA Insurance Brokers Ltd v FAI Insurance Co Ltd (1993) 41 FCR 164; 112 ALR 511.
32.
See Diane Skapinker and J W Carter, ‘Breach of Contract and Misleading or Deceptive Conduct in Australia’ (1997) 113 LQR 294.
33.
(1993) 114 ALR 355. See also Wright v TNT Management Pty Ltd (1989) 15 NSWLR 679 per McHugh JA (dissenting).
34.
McWilliams’ Wines Pty Ltd v L S Booth Wine Transport Pty Ltd (1992) 25 NSWLR 723.
35.
Comalco Aluminium Ltd v Mogal Freight Services Pty Ltd (1993) 113 ALR 677.
36.
See [18-13]–[18-18].
37.
See in particular Rhône Poulenc Agrochimie SA v UIM Chemical Services Pty Ltd (1986) 68 ALR 77; Franich v Swannell (1993) 10 WAR 459.
38.
See, eg Demagogue Pty Ltd v Ramensky (1992) 110 ALR 608; Nagy v Masters Dairy Ltd (1996) 150 ALR 273; Leda Holdings Pty Ltd v Oraka Pty Ltd (1998) ATPR 41-601.
39.
Compare eg Spedley Securities Ltd v Bank of New Zealand (1991) ATPR 41-143 and Fliegner v MNM Pty Ltd (2000) NSW Conv R 55-937 with Nagy v Masters Dairy Ltd (1996) 150 ALR 273 and Johnson Tiles Pty Ltd v Esso Australia Ltd (2000) 104 FCR 564. Query how far cases of ‘mere’ silence raising this issue will in any event occur: see, eg Demagogue Pty Ltd v Ramensky (1992) 110 ALR 608.
40.
See, eg Hanave Pty Ltd v Lfot Pty Ltd (1999) ATPR 41-687; Mikaelian v Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (1999) 163 ALR 172.
41.
See, eg Ryan v Great Lakes Council (1999) 102 LGERA 123 (no implied representation from sale of oysters that they were uncontaminated).
42.
Miller & Associates Insurance Broking Pty Ltd v BMW Australia Finance Ltd (2010) 241 CLR 357 at 371; 270 ALR 204 at 212; [2010] HCA 31 at [22] per French CJ and Kiefel J.
43.
See, eg [18-38], [18-63], [18-65].
44.
For examples see Brown v The Jam Factory Pty Ltd (1981) 35 ALR 79; Gurdag v BS Stillwell Ford Pty Ltd (1985) 61 ALR 689.
45.
See [10-04]–[10-10].
46.
See [12-05]–[12-23].
47.
See [19-20].
48.
See [10-11]–[10-14].
49.
See [18-25]–[18-28].
50.
See [18-29]–[18-36].
51.
For illustrations see, eg Menhaden Pty Ltd v Citibank NA (1984) 55 ALR 709; Bond Corp Pty Ltd v Thiess Contractors Pty Ltd (1987) 71 ALR 615. However, not every careless mistake amounts to misleading or deceptive conduct: see O’Shea v Sullivan (1994) ATPR (Digest) 46-124.
52.
Replacing Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 80.
53.
See, eg R French, ‘The Law of Torts and Pt V of the Trade Practices Act’ in Finn, ed, Essays on Torts, 1989, pp 183–202.
54.
See C E K Hampson, ‘Blocked Contractual Arteries? Try a Section 52 By-pass’ (1993) 1 TPLJ 22 at 34–6.
55.
Replacing Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 82. See generally Lockhart, Law of Misleading or Deceptive Conduct, 2nd ed, 2003, ch 11.
56.
See Chapter 24.
57.
See, eg Remedios v Kentucky Homes Pty Ltd (1987) ATPR 40-799; Wardley Australia Ltd v Western Australia (1992) 175 CLR 514; 109 ALR 247.
58.
JLW (Vic) Pty Ltd v Tsiloglou [1994] 1 VR 237.
59.
For an example see Ricochet Pty Ltd v Equity Trustees Executor and Agency Co Ltd (1993) 113 ALR 30.
60.
See, eg Henville v Walker (2001) 206 CLR 459; 182 ALR 37.
61.
See I & L Securities Pty Ltd v HTW Valuers (Brisbane) Pty Ltd (2002) 210 CLR 109 at 121, 128, 137, 175; 192 ALR 1 at 8, 14, 22, 52.
62.
See Henville v Walker (2001) 206 CLR 459; 182 ALR 37; I & L Securities Pty Ltd v HTW Valuers (Brisbane) Pty Ltd (2002) 210 CLR 109 at 130, 136–7, 177–8; 192 ALR 1 at 16, 21, 53.
63.
See Henville v Walker (2001) 206 CLR 459 at 483; 182 ALR 37 at 53.
64.
See Dominelli Ford (Hurstville) Pty Ltd v Karmot Auto Spares Pty Ltd (1992) ATPR 41-198; Ricochet Pty Ltd v Equity Trustees Executor and Agency Co Ltd (1993) 113 ALR 30.
65.
See, eg Henville v Walker (2001) 206 CLR 459; 182 ALR 37 at 41, 70–1; I & L Securities Pty Ltd v HTW Valuers (Brisbane) Pty Ltd (2002) 210 CLR 109 at 141; 192 ALR 1 at 25 (representee’s intentional act may break chain of causation). See also Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), Pt VIA (proportionate liability for misleading or deceptive conduct — replacing (Cth) Trade Practices Act 1974, Pt VIA).
66.
Replacing Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 82.
67.
Gates v CML Life Assurance Society Ltd (1986) 160 CLR 1; 63 ALR 600. See also Wardley Australia Ltd v Western Australia (1992) 175 CLR 514.
68.
Shepherd v Noyes Bros Pty Ltd (1985) ATPR 40-588 at 46,750.
69.
On this distinction see [18-69]–[18-72]. For discussion see, eg D Price, ‘Opening Gates: The Measure of Damages under the Trade Practices Act’ (1994) 1 CCCL 257, but compare C Colvin, ‘Tales of the Unexpected: Damages for Lost Expectations’ (1997) 5 TPLJ 17.
70.
(1998) 196 CLR 494. See S Lo, ‘Expectation Damages under the Trade Practices Act s 82’ (2001) 9 C&CLJ 174.
71.
See, however, Kenny & Good Pty Ltd v MGICA (1992) Ltd (1999) 199 CLR 413 at 461; 163 ALR 611, where in a joint judgment with Callinan J, Kirby J said that very often in s 18 cases the amount of damages would coincide with that in a common law action in deceit.
72.
(1998) 196 CLR 494 at 515.
73.
As to the distinction between ‘reliance’ and ‘expectation’ damages see [18-69], [18-71], [37-10], [3711].
74.
See Henville v Walker (2001) 206 CLR 459; 182 ALR 37 at 72. See also Environmental Systems Pty Ltd v Peerless Holdings Pty Ltd (2008) 19 VR 358; [2008] VSCA 26.
75.
For a discussion of some of the difficulties see Netaff Pty Ltd v Bikane Pty Ltd (1990) 26 FCR 305.
76.
Sellars v Adelaide Petroleum NL (1994) 179 CLR 332; 120 ALR 16 establishes that although the ordinary civil standard of the balance of probabilities applies to the issue of whether the applicant suffered some loss of a commercial opportunity having some (not negligible) value, the value of that chance is to be ascertained by reference to the degree of probabilities or possibilities (ie some damages can be recovered even though there was a less than 50 per cent chance of that opportunity in fact proving to be profitable).
77.
See, eg Sellars v Adelaide Petroleum NL (1994) 179 CLR 332. For the concept of exemplary (or punitive) damages see [35-03].
78.
See Brabazon v Western Mail Ltd (1985) ATPR 40-549; Nixon v Slater & Gordon (2000) 175 ALR 15.
79.
See, eg Musca v Astle Corp Pty Ltd (1988) 80 ALR 251.
80.
For a detailed discussion see Carter, Carter on Contract, §21-130.
81.
Replacing Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 75B.
82.
See, eg Yorke v Lucas (1985) 158 CLR 661; 61 ALR 307; Richardson & Wrench (Holdings) Pty Ltd v Ligon No 174 Pty Ltd (1994) 123 ALR 681.
83.
Replacing Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 87.
84.
See also Australian Consumer Law, s 242.
85.
See Australian Consumer Law, s 237(3).
86.
See the discussion in Akron Securities Ltd v Iliffe (1997) 41 NSWLR 353; Marks v GIO Australia Holdings Ltd (1998) 196 CLR 494.
87.
Marks v GIO Australia Holdings Ltd (1998) 196 CLR 494.
88.
See in particular Henjo Investments Pty Ltd v Collins Marrickville Pty Ltd (1988) 79 ALR 83; Tenji v Henneberry & Associates Pty Ltd (2000) 98 FCR 324.
89.
See, eg Milchas Investments Pty Ltd v Larkin (1989) 96 FLR 464; but see Angelatos v National Australia Bank (1994) ATPR 41-333.
90.
See, however, cases such as Prioris Pty Ltd v Inscorp Holdings Ltd (1995) 124 FLR 409; News Ltd v Australian Rugby Football League Ltd (1996) 139 ALR 193.
91.
(1993) 179 CLR 15; 117 ALR 321. See also Carter, Carter on Contract, §21-120.
92.
(1880) 5 App Cas 317.
93.
(1977) 29 FLR 144. The Full Federal Court has however held94 that the observations in Webb Distributors should be regarded as having been overtaken by the decision in Marks v GIO Australia Holdings Ltd.95 However, suggestions in other cases that the High Court has departed by inference from its prior decisions have consistently been rejected by the High Court.96
94.
Tenji v Henneberry & Associates Pty Ltd (2000) 98 FCR 324.
95.
(1988) 196 CLR 494.
96.
See Garcia v National Australia Bank Ltd (1998) 194 CLR 395; 155 ALR 614; Western Export Services Inc v Jireh International Pty Ltd (2011) 282 ALR 604; [2011] HCA 45. See also Fara Constructions Pty Ltd v Say-Dee Pty Ltd (2006) 230 CLR 89; 236 ALR 209.
97.
Campbell v Backoffice Investments Pty Ltd (2009) 238 CLR 304 at 320; 257 ALR 610 at 621; [2009] HCA 25 at [29].
98.
See, eg Britt Allcroft (Thomas) LLC v Miller (2000) ATPR 41-776 (affirmed (2000) ATPR 41-792).
99.
(2004) 218 CLR 592; 212 ALR 357. Contrast Granitgard Pty Ltd v Termicide Pest Control Pty Ltd
(2011) 281 ALR 1 at 12; [2011] FCAFC 81 at [30]. 100. (2004) 218 CLR 592 at 605. 101. (2004) 218 CLR 592 per Gleeson CJ, Hayne and Heydon JJ. 102. (2004) 218 CLR 592 at 609. 103. Campbell v Backoffice Investments Pty Ltd (2009) 238 CLR 304 at 320; 257 ALR 610 at 621; [2009] HCA 25 at [29]. 104. Life Insurance Co of Australia Ltd v Phillips (1925) 36 CLR 60 at 82, 87. But see Byers v Dorotea Pty Ltd (1986) 69 ALR 714 at 724–5, and cf Overbrooke Estates Ltd v Glencombe Properties Ltd [1974] 1 WLR 1335; Walker v Boyle [1982] 1 All ER 634. 105. S Pearson & Son Ltd v Dublin Corp [1907] AC 353; Snarski & Snarski v Barbarich [1969] WAR 46. See also Butcher v Lachlan Elder Realty Pty Ltd (2004) 218 CLR 592; 212 ALR 357. See also [1419]. ‘Exclusion’ or ‘compensation’ clauses will not necessarily be effective in the face of all forms of mistake or misdescription either: see [14-12]. 106. See Petera Pty Ltd v EAJ Pty Ltd (1984) 7 FCR 375; IOOF Australia Trustees (NSW) Ltd v Tantipech (1998) 156 ALR 470. See generally Andrew Terry, ‘Disclaimers and Deceptive Conduct’ (1986) 14 ABLR 478. 107. (1986) 69 ALR 715. 108. Replacing Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 53(g). 109. See Australian Consumer Law, s 151(1)(m) (replacing Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 75AZC(1) (k)). See also Miller v Fiona’s Clothes Horse of Centrepoint Pty Ltd (1989) ATPR 40-963. 110. In addition, the term may be an unfair term. See Chapter 24. 111. See, eg Keen Mar Corp Pty Ltd v Labrador Park Shopping Centre Pty Ltd (1989) ATPR (Digest) 46048; IOOF Australia Trustees (NSW) Ltd v Tantipech (1998) 156 ALR 470; Burg Design Pty Ltd v Wolki (1999) 162 ALR 639.
[page 433]
Chapter 20
Contractual Mistake [20-01] Introduction. ‘Mistake’ is a difficult part of contract law. Contracting parties’ decisions and actions are often influenced by ‘mistake’ (‘error’ or ‘misapprehension’). Indeed, perhaps in most contracts one party at least is mistaken to some degree as to the extent of benefit it will provide. Obviously, such unilateral mistakes of motive cannot be relieved against. The two essential questions with which ‘mistake’ is concerned are: when will mistake be ‘operative’? and what effect does the mistake have? The second question may be rephrased as: what do we mean by ‘operative’? or what remedies are available for mistake? Of course, it is always assumed that one party, whether sharing the mistake or not, resists the claim for relief, that is, asserts that the contract is binding according to its terms. However, it is only a small proportion of mistakes that will, on any reckoning, be cognisable in contract law, that is, constitute ‘operative mistake’. Thus, the mere presence of ‘mistake’ does not signify legal consequences. Moreover, most situations in which one or both parties are mistaken are resolved by the application of legal doctrines other than those peculiar to contract law. Before considering further the legal doctrine of mistake in contract, it is appropriate to make some attempt at classifying factual situations which might be analysed under the rubric of mistake.
Types of Mistake [20-02] Common mistake. The words ‘common’ and ‘mutual’ are used to describe mistake situations where both parties are mistaken. In this work, a
mistake is described as ‘common’ where it is shared by both parties, that is, where they make the same mistake. For example, a seller and buyer of goods may contract under the mistaken belief that the goods existed when the contract was made, whereas in truth they have been destroyed. Although, in the case of operative common mistake, the bargain fails for want of subject matter, it should not be thought that a contract is always, or even usually, ineffective merely because both parties are mistaken. Were the law otherwise, all contracts induced by innocent misrepresentation would fail. [page 434] One further distinction may be drawn. Whereas mistake proceeding from misrepresentation is induced, in many cases a mistake will be spontaneous, in the sense that it was not induced by the words or conduct of the other. Common sense tells us that the law is more likely to provide relief in respect of induced mistakes than spontaneous mistakes. [20-03] Mutual mistake. Although the word ‘mutual’ has often been used to refer to shared mistakes, as illustrated above,1 a distinction is drawn between common and mutual mistake. The word ‘mutual’ describes situations where, although parties may both be mistaken, their mistakes may differ. In such cases, the objective facts are equivocal and the subjective states of mind of the parties are at odds. Such parties are at cross-purposes in contract formation: consensus ad idem is only apparent since, in truth, the parties mean different things. For example, parties may contract for the sale and purchase of a horse of a certain name, or of a house in a street of a certain name, whereas in truth there exist two horses with that name, or two streets of that name, the seller intending to refer to one and the buyer to the other. [20-04] Unilateral mistake. In the case of common mistake both parties are in error. In the case of mutual mistake, it is not clear that either party can be described as being ‘in error’. On the other hand, a unilateral mistake is a mistake by one party only, the other not being mistaken at all. For example, one party may be mistaken as to the true identity of the other contracting party. Where such a mistake has legal consequences, it will be found that the non-mistaken party knows of the other party’s mistake.
There is scope for a great variety of situations according to whether the nonmistaken party knows or suspects that the other party is mistaken or has caused or contributed to the mistake. However, most cases of unilateral mistake occur when the parties disagree as to the meaning of the contract. Once it is acknowledged or held that the understanding of one party is ‘correct’, the case becomes one of unilateral mistake. In these cases, at the time of contracting, one party apprehends the position correctly and the other does not.
Approaches to Mistake [20-05] Generally. There are five possibilities to be considered in any analysis of the consequences of mistake in contract. First, and by far the most common situation, the mistake may have no effect at all, because it is neither operative nor the result of a representation by one of the parties. Second, the presence of mistake may be relevant to equitable relief, to set aside the contract, to refuse specific performance or to order rectification.2 Third, the mistake may be associated with a right to rescind a contract ab initio (‘from the beginning’). Since all cases of misrepresentation inducing a contract exemplify mistake, a right of rescission will arise in all such cases. [page 435] However, these cases are analysed under the rubric of misrepresentation, not mistake.3 Fourth, the mistake may be operative in the sense that it renders the contract void ab initio, that is, the contract never came into existence.4 Fifth, mistake may be a basis for recovering money paid. This is governed by principles regulating restitution for unjust enrichment. Unless the payer has simply paid more than was due, a payment made under a valid contract is not recoverable merely on the basis of mistake. The plaintiff must therefore establish that the contract was void or has been validly rescinded.5 [20-06] Common law. At common law, that is, prior to the fusion of law and equity, mistake was a very narrow doctrine. Thus, putting rescission for fraud to one side, a mistake operative at common law may negative contractual assent, so
that the ‘contract’ is void. Today, at least as a matter of logic, this can be the case only if there is no agreement to contract, because the mistake caused offer and acceptance, both properly construed, not to coincide, or because the objective theory of contract is displaced.6 These are very rare occurrences. Although in a handful of cases contracts have been held void on the ground of unilateral mistake,7 cases in which a contract has been held void on the ground of common or mutual mistake are virtually unknown, at least in Australian law.8 If offer and acceptance coincide it is difficult to see how the agreement so constituted can be void. If the parties have agreed (expressly or impliedly) that the contract is not to bind them unless a certain circumstance exists or a certain assumption is correct, effect will be given to this term, as creating a condition precedent. However, it is incorrect to call the initial agreement ‘void’ when it transpires that the circumstance does not exist or the assumption was incorrect. In any event, it would be an error to regard voidness as the only possible consequence of mistake at common law. The common law recognised that mistake might provide one party with a right of rescission, at least if it arose from a misrepresentation by the other. Thus, in Kennedy v Panama New Zealand and Australian Royal Mail Co Ltd9 Blackburn J said:10 There is, however, a very important difference between cases where a contract may be rescinded on account of fraud, and those in which it may be rescinded on the ground that there is a difference in substance between the thing bargained for and that obtained. It is enough to show that there was a fraudulent representation as to any part of that which induced the party to
[page 436] enter into the contract which he seeks to rescind; but where there has been an innocent misrepresentation or misapprehension, it does not authorise a rescission, unless it is such as to shew that there is a complete difference in substance between what was supposed to be and what was taken, so as to constitute a failure of consideration. For example, where a horse is bought under a belief that it is sound, if the purchaser was induced to buy by a fraudulent misrepresentation as to the horse’s soundness, the contract may be rescinded. If it was induced by an honest misrepresentation as to its soundness, though it may be clear that both vendor and purchaser thought that they were dealing about a sound horse and were in error, yet the purchaser must pay the whole price, unless there was a warranty …
This aspect of mistake at common law is now of merely historical interest because of the more expansive rights of rescission available under equitable principles.11 [20-07] Equity. Courts of equity have relieved against mistake where the
common law courts could not. This is true to the origin and nature of equitable jurisdiction as a supplement to the common law. Thus, in respect of a valid contract, equity could intervene on the ground of mistake in three ways: to refuse specific performance;12 to rectify the contract;13 or to set the contract aside. It is the third possibility, in effect a right of rescission under equitable principles similar to those which operate in the context of misrepresentation, which is our main concern.14 However, no question of rescission can arise where the effect of mistake is to deny that the contract exists. [20-08] Remedies for mistake. The narrowness of the common law approach to mistake is largely explained by the limited remedies available. Treating a contract as void relegates the parties to restitutionary remedies.15 An award of damages for breach of contract is not possible: damages are only available under tort law or statute.16 It is due to equity’s wider range of remedies, and its ability to take into account and deal with all aspects of a dispute, that mistake could, in equity, be treated as a broader concept than the common law would allow. Today, where equitable relief is available in all superior courts, a wide range of possibilities exists. First, a litigant may seek a declaration that mistake prevented a contract from coming into being. Second, and at the other extreme, is the discretion to withhold the remedy of specific performance, on the basis that the contract was entered into under the influence of mistake. However, it must be emphasised that all the circumstances of a case must be taken into account, and it must not [page 437] be readily assumed, where specific performance is refused against a mistaken party, that the refusal is based on the mistake alone or at all. Moreover, such a refusal says nothing as to the status of the ‘contract’, and the court may or may not be prepared to take the further step of setting aside the contract, so as to prevent the plaintiff enforcing it by an action for damages based on the defendant’s failure to perform.17
Third, there may be a right of rescission, or a right to approach the court for an order setting the contract aside or upholding the validity of a rescission.18 [20-09] Mistake must relate to factual matter. The traditional view is that, just as a statement or other conduct, in order to amount to actionable misrepresentation, must generally be as to past or existing fact,19 so must mistake. So it is usually said that a mistake of law is no ground for relief whereas a mistake of fact is.20 Although courts of equity were readier than courts of common law to relieve against mistakes of law,21 a contracting party’s mistaken construction of a contract is not today a ground for affording relief,22 unless it was caused by the other party.23 However, two points may be made in this connection. First, the distinction between a mistake of law and a mistake of fact is not clearly defined by the cases.24 As with misrepresentation, ‘law’ is used in this context to refer to the general law of the land and not to private rights. Private rights usually arise from the operation of the general law on particular facts. The hybrid result, a legal right or lack of it, tends to be treated as a matter of fact rather than of law. In Cooper v Phibbs,25 in which the subject matter of the contract was a private title to a salmon fishery,26 Lord Westbury affirmed that the expression ‘ignorantia juris non excusat’ (ignorance of the law does not excuse), relates to ‘the general law, the ordinary law of the country’ and that a private right of ownership is a matter of fact.27 Second, the idea that a mistake cannot ground a claim for restitutionary relief unless one of fact has been rejected.28 It is at least arguable that the [page 438] same approach should be taken where other forms of relief are at issue in the context of mistake.29
Mistake and Other Doctrines [20-10] Frustration and mistake. The relationship between mistake and frustration is considered later.30 It is sufficient at this stage to point out that issues of mistake arise, if at all, in respect of matters occurring prior to entry into the contract, whereas frustration is concerned with subsequent events. For
example, although most of the cases which arose from the postponement of Edward VII’s coronation concerned frustration, Griffith v Brymer31 was a case of mistake. The plaintiff hired a room from the defendant to view the coronation procession on 26 June 1902. The contract was verbal and was made at 11 am on 24 June. Unbeknown to the parties, the decision to operate on the King had been taken at 10 am. The plaintiff’s action to recover the amount (£100) paid by him succeeded. Wright J said32 there was a ‘missupposition of the state of facts which went to the whole root of the matter’. [20-11] Misrepresentation and mistake. There is an obvious connection between mistake and misrepresentation, since mistake may be induced by misrepresentation. This can be seen most clearly in cases of unilateral mistake as to identity.33 The mistake arises from the fact that one party has made a fraudulent misrepresentation to the other. But even a case of common mistake may arise from a misrepresentation, since where A believes that a fact is true, and represents the truth of the fact to B, both A and B are under a mistake. The fact that the mistake of B arose from a misrepresentation by A implies that the parties’ rights and liabilities are to be resolved under the rubric of misrepresentation.34 This is because35 a misrepresentation, whether fraudulent or innocent, will be found to give rise to greater rights and liability and more ample and flexible remedies than mere mistake as such. However, it is not difficult to see why in some cases of induced mistake a party may be dissatisfied by the remedies available for misrepresentation. For example, assume that C sells goods to D, in the mistaken belief (induced by D) that D was in fact E. The fraudulent misrepresentation by D provides C with a right to rescind the contract and to sue (in tort) for damages. But D may have no assets and C may be more concerned to regain the goods. If the goods have already been sold to F, an innocent [page 439] purchaser, this will only be possible if the contract between C and D had no validity at all, by reason of C’s mistake.36 [20-12] Mistake and warranty. The law of contract is designed to give effect to the intentions of the parties. The terms of their agreement are paramount. So, most disputes said to involve questions of mistake will be resolved by the process of construction of the contract and the implication of terms. Similarly, a
mistake as to a term of the contract is distinguishable from a mistake as to collateral matters. The important distinction between a contractual term (a ‘warranty’ in the broad sense) and a mere representation was explained earlier.37 Where a statement of fact is made which induces a party to enter into a contract, the statement will give rise to a right to rescind the contract, assuming falsity and reliance. However, damages for breach of contract are only available if the truth of the statement was guaranteed.38 It is, of course, tempting to say that a person cannot guarantee the impossible, so that where a mistake arises by reason of ignorance39 as to the truth of a statement or the accuracy of a term of the contract, there can be no contractual liability. However, the common law does not work in this way. Whether a person has guaranteed the truth of a fact depends on the construction placed on the words used in the circumstances of the case. A person may guarantee the truth of a fact which is false, and be responsible in damages even though the very subject matter of the contract never existed.40 The guarantee of the truth of a fact amounts to an assumption of contractual responsibility for the truth of the statement, and the acceptance of the risk of error. Once it is found that one party has accepted the risk vis-à-vis the other party, of the existence of facts, it is simply not open to the promisor to plead the mistake as a defence. The warranty is all that matters.41 [20-13] Mistake and objective theory of contract. The primary emphasis of the law of contract in common law systems is on how one party’s words and conduct ought reasonably to have been understood by the other, rather than their subjective states of mind.42 It would be unjust for one contracting party to be detrimentally affected by what was actually in the mind of the other when unaware of that person’s state of mind. This injustice does not exist where the other party knew or should have known of the other’s actual state of mind. [page 440] In other legal systems there may be a greater emphasis on subjective intention. However, as Dixon and Fullagar JJ said in McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission:43 When once the common law had made up its mind that a promise supported by consideration ought to be performed, it was inevitable that the theorisings of the civilians about ‘mistake’ should mean little or nothing to it. On the other hand, the question whether a promisor was excused from performance by existing or supervening impossibility without fault on his part was a practical every-day question of
which the common law has been vividly conscious … But here too the common law has generally been true to its theory of simple contract, and it has always regarded the fundamental question as being: ‘What did the promisor really promise?’ Did he promise to perform his part at all events, or only subject to the mutually contemplated original or continued existence of a particular subject matter? So questions of intention or ‘presumed intention’ arise, and these must be determined in the light of the words used by the parties and reasonable inferences from all the surrounding circumstances.
McRae’s case concerned an allegation that the contract was void on account of mistake, but the inability to rely on subjective mistake extends further. Subjective mistake cannot be used as a defence to specific performance44 or as a basis for rescission of the contract.45
Common Mistake [20-14] General. In the following discussion it is assumed that, although agreement has been reached (because offer and acceptance coincide or otherwise) both parties share the same mistake. This is not to say that their ‘shared’ or ‘common’ mistake is of equal significance to both parties. Given that only one party seeks to be relieved of the contract, the other apparently finds the mistake made not disadvantageous. Nor is it implicit in common mistake that the parties had equal access to the means of knowing the truth: one may have had readier access than the other.
Common Mistake Rendering Contract Void Absence of subject matter of contract [20-15] Failure of consideration. Absence of consideration signifies that a ‘contract’ is void for failure to satisfy the law’s requirements for the existence of a contract, but failure of consideration does not require that a contract be held void. The concept of ‘total failure of consideration’46 is the basic notion which underlies the treatment of mistake at common law. If the consideration for a payment fails totally it may be recovered by the payer, because it would unjustly enrich the payee to retain the payment in the circumstances.47 What the common law courts could not readily do was order the repayment of money where the consideration only partially failed.
[page 441] Therefore, the contract could not be treated as void in cases where the failure of consideration was partial rather than total. The mere fact that the consideration for a payment has failed does not indicate that the contract was void from its inception. Accordingly, it is clearly incorrect to treat cases in which money has been held recoverable on the ground of total failure of consideration, in circumstances where there may have been a common mistake between the parties,48 as justifiable only on the basis that the contract was void for mistake. Indeed, many of the cases may be justified on equitable grounds,49 or the terms of the contract, express or implied.50 However, the limitations on common law relief in the context of mistake implies that a contract cannot be regarded as void for mistake unless there was at least a combination of mistake and total failure of consideration.51 [20-16] Sale of specific goods which have ceased to exist. Under the sale of goods legislation,52 a contract for the sale of specific goods is void if the goods have, without the knowledge of the seller, ‘perished at the time when the contract is made’. This provision is thought to be derived from Couturier v Hastie,53 a case which has given rise to much debate. The plaintiffs were the consignors of a cargo of corn. The buyer failed to pay. They sued their British del credere commission agents.54 Unbeknown to these parties, a few days before the contract and the sending of the bought note to the buyer, the vessel carrying the corn had put into harbour (following tempestuous weather and resultant heating and fermenting of the cargo) where the cargo was surveyed, found unfit to be carried further, and sold. On his discovery of these facts the buyer repudiated his contract. At the trial, Martin B construed the contract as one for the sale of a cargo supposed to exist and to be capable of transfer to the buyer, and so found for the agents. The Court of Exchequer, by majority, construed the contract of sale as one by which the buyer bought the cargo if it existed, but otherwise the benefit of the insurance, so that the buyer was liable to pay under his contract and the agents were, when the buyer defaulted, liable to the plaintiffs in his place. On further appeal, the Court of Exchequer Chamber emphasised that the case turned on the construction of the
[page 442] contract. Coleridge J (for the court) agreed with the trial judge’s construction, then referred to the plaintiffs’ contention that some consideration had passed to the buyer, namely, the benefit of the shipping documents:55 If the contract for sale of the cargo was valid the shipping documents would pass as accessories to it; but if, in consequence of the previous sale of the cargo, the contract failed as to the principal subject matter of it, the shipping documents would not pass … For these reasons, it appears to us that the basis of the contract in this case was the sale and purchase of goods, and that all the other terms in the bought note were dependent upon that, and that we cannot give to it the effect of a contract for goods lost or not lost.
The House of Lords took the opinion of the judges which was unanimously in accord with the judgment of the Exchequer Chamber. Lord Cranworth LC also emphasised that the whole question turned on the construction of the contract, and gave as the true construction that the contract showed that the parties contemplated ‘an existing something to be sold and bought’56 and that if that something was sold and bought, then the benefit of the insurance should go with it. Nowhere did the court use the term ‘void’ or suggest that the contract was void. The holding was that the contract of sale could not have been enforced against the buyer. This would have been obvious and unarguable but for the possible construction that the buyer had bought ‘goods lost or not lost’, that is, had bought an ‘adventure’. The case also leaves untouched the possibility of an action for damages by the buyer for breach by the seller of a warranty that the goods existed. [20-17] Scope of the sale of goods rule. Given that the sale of goods legislation provides that a contract in relation to specific goods which perished prior to entry into the contract is void, one might expect similar treatment of a contract in relation to goods which never existed. However, in McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission57 the High Court held that this is not so. The Commission accepted the plaintiffs’ tender for the purchase of an ‘oil tanker lying on Jourmaund Reef, which is approximately 100 miles north of Samarai’. The plaintiffs were sent a ‘sales advice note’ in respect of ‘one (1) oil tanker including contents wrecked on Jourmaund Reef approximately 100 miles north of Samarai’. The plaintiffs could not locate Jourmaund Reef on a map and the Commission supplied them with the latitude and longitude at which the tanker was alleged to be lying. At considerable expense the plaintiffs fitted out a salvage expedition but found no tanker at the locality given and in fact there was none in the locality at any material time. They sued the Commission for damages
for breach of contract and the torts of deceit and negligence. The Commission contended that the contract was void for common mistake and the trial judge, Webb J,58 so held in reliance on Couturier v Hastie.59 However, his judgment in this respect was reversed on appeal. In [page 443] the leading judgment, Dixon and Fullagar JJ (with whom McTiernan J agreed) analysed Couturier v Hastie and concluded that the question whether a contract is void for common mistake is primarily one of construction of the contract to ascertain ‘whether the contract was subject to an implied condition precedent that the goods were in existence. Prima facie, one would think, there would be no such implied condition precedent, the position being simply that the vendor promised that the goods were in existence’.60 They concluded:61 Whatever might then have been held on the facts of Couturier v Hastie, it is impossible in this case to imply any such term. The terms of the contract and the surrounding circumstances clearly exclude any such implication. The buyers relied upon, and acted upon, the assertion of the seller that there was a tanker in existence. It is not a case in which the parties can be seen to have proceeded on the basis of a common assumption of fact so as to justify the conclusion that the correctness of the assumption was intended by both parties to be a condition precedent to the creation of contractual obligations. The officers of the Commission made an assumption, but the plaintiffs did not make an assumption in the same sense. They knew nothing except what the Commission had told them. If they had been asked, they would certainly not have said: ‘Of course, if there is no tanker, there is no contract’. They would have said: ‘We shall have to go and take possession of the tanker. We simply accept the Commission’s assurance that there is a tanker and the Commission’s promise to give us that tanker’. The only proper construction of the contract is that it included a promise by the Commission that there was a tanker in the position specified. The Commission contracted that there was a tanker there.
They pointed out that the meaning of Couturier’s case was merely that since the contract was construed as one for the sale of specific goods, there was a total failure of consideration so far as the buyer was concerned, with the result that he was not liable for the price. Dixon and Fullagar JJ considered that the Commission had warranted the existence of an oil tanker at the locality specified and was liable in damages for breach of this warranty.62 [20-18] Sale of land. A vendor of land who is unable to make out title will not in all cases be liable in damages for the purchaser’s loss of bargain, but this is not because the contract is void, or because there is no breach of contract. It arises from a particular rule of damages rather than the mistake doctrine.63 Apart from this special rule, such contracts commonly provide that errors or misstatements in the contract description of the property do not annul the sale, but shall be the
subject of compensation.64 In Svanosio v McNamara65 a contract was entered into for the purchase by the plaintiff of the ‘Bull’s Head’ hotel and the land on which it stood together with the licence and goodwill of the hotel. The price had been paid [page 444] and the plaintiff entered into possession. After title was conveyed it was discovered that the hotel stood partly on the land conveyed and partly on Crown land to which the vendor did not have title. There was, however, no suggestion of fraud on the part of the vendor, and so the plaintiff relied on common mistake as to a fundamental fact, in that both parties believed that the hotel stood wholly on the land sold. Dixon CJ and Fullagar J said that neither the contract nor the conveyance of the property was void. So far as the contract was concerned, they said:66 [I]t may be assumed that all parties believed that the hotel stood wholly on the land sold. In that sense there was a ‘common mistake’. It may also be assumed that the [plaintiff], if he had known that a considerable part of the building stood on Crown land, would not have entered into the contract. But these facts do not make the contract void.
Accordingly, it was held that the contract was not void.67 [20-19] Partial absence of subject matter. Svanosio v McNamara68 illustrates the difficulties which confront a party who argues that a partial absence of subject matter has the effect of rendering the contract void where both parties believed that the entire subject matter existed.69 Dixon CJ and Fullagar J approved70 the following passage in the judgment of Denning LJ in Solle v Butcher:71 [O]nce a contract has been made, that is to say, once the parties, whatever their inmost states of mind, have to all outward appearances agreed with sufficient certainty in the same terms on the same subject matter, then the contract is good unless and until it is set aside for failure of some condition on which the existence of the contract depends, or for fraud, or on some equitable ground. Neither party can rely on his own mistake to say it was a nullity from the beginning, no matter that it was a mistake which to his mind was fundamental, and no matter that the other party knew that he was under a mistake. A fortiori, if the other party did not know of the mistake, but shared it.
[20-20] Ability to rely on common mistake. In McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission72 the High Court, as an alternative ground for its decision, held that if there was an element of mistake, the Commission could not rely on it because it arose from the fault of its own servants in recklessly, and
without reasonable grounds, asserting the existence of the tanker at the specified locality. Thus, it seems that there is a general [page 445] principle prohibiting reliance on common mistake where there is an element of fault.73
Common mistake as to quality of subject matter [20-21] Introduction. There is considerable support, particularly in the English cases,74 for a distinction between cases where the failure to answer to the contract description is a mere breach of contract and those where the thing delivered is of a different ‘kind’ from that to which the contract referred. In the latter case, the courts have treated the contract as void or allowed an action for money had and received based on total failure of consideration. It may be that some of these cases are based on the view that common mistake renders a contract void where the subject matter is different in kind.75 [20-22] Bell v Lever Bros. The House of Lords reviewed the common law principles relating to common mistake in Bell v Lever Bros Ltd76 but the judgments did little to clarify the law. Lever Brothers had a subsidiary, Niger Co Ltd, of whose board Bell and Snelling were members for a term of five years not yet expired under service agreements with Lever Bros. These obliged Bell and Snelling to devote the whole of their time to the company’s business. The contract in respect of which the common mistake was alleged was one by which they resigned immediately (and thus prematurely) in consideration of payments totalling £50,000 by Lever Bros. In fact, Bell and Snelling had, while holding office, engaged in some private transactions resulting in secret profits to themselves. This was a breach of fiduciary duty which would have entitled their employers to terminate the service agreements immediately and without compensation. Bell and Snelling admitted that they were liable to account for their secret profits, but denied liability to repay the £50,000. Lever Bros claimed damages for fraudulent misrepresentation and breach of contract. The jury negatived the allegation of fraud. However, it also found:
that the defendants had committed breaches of their service agreements which would have justified their immediate termination; that Lever Bros did not know of Bell and Snelling’s private trading; and that they did not have the trading in mind when the termination contract was negotiated. [page 446] The English Court of Appeal (affirming Wright J) held the termination contract void for common mistake, so that the payments made by Lever Bros under it could be recovered. A majority of the House of Lords (Lord Warrington, with whom Lord Hailsham agreed, dissented) allowed Bell and Snelling’s appeal. The ground of the decision was that the parties’ erroneous assumption that the service agreements were not terminable (except by consent) did not involve the actual subject matter of the contract but a mere quality thereof or motive therefor, and so were not of a sufficiently fundamental character.77 The case was, perhaps, a difficult one, although it is supposed to be a watershed, and later cases, at least in England, are to be read in the light of it. In considering whether the termination contract was vitiated by common mistake, Lord Atkin first referred to whether there was an implied term to the effect that it would be void if the parties’ assumption — that the service agreements could not be terminated without payment — proved to be incorrect. He referred to the danger of reconstructing contracts to make them more businesslike, or more ‘just’, and said that a condition discharging the consensus should not be implied ‘unless the new state of facts makes the contract something different in kind from the contract in the original state of facts’.78 In his view, the test was: ‘Does the state of the new facts destroy the identity of the subject matter as it was in the original state of facts?’79 Clearly, this test makes everything hinge on construction of the contract and identification of its subject matter. Applying this approach to the facts, Lord Atkin concluded that the subject matter of the contract was the same:80 But, on the whole, I have come to the conclusion that it would be wrong to decide that an agreement to terminate a definite specified contract is void if it turns out that the agreement had already been broken and could have been terminated otherwise. The contract released is the identical contract in both cases, and the party paying for release gets exactly what he bargains for. It seems immaterial that he could have got the same result in another way, or that if he had known the true facts he would not have entered into the bargain.
buys B’s horse; he thinks the horse is sound, and he pays the price of a sound horse; he would certainly not have bought the horse if he had known as the fact that the horse is unsound. If B has made no representation as to soundness and has not contracted that the horse is sound, A is bound and cannot recover back the price. buys a picture from B; both A and B believe it to be the work of an old master, and a high price is paid. It turns out to be a modern copy. A has no remedy in the absence of representation or warranty. agrees to take on lease or to buy from B an unfurnished dwelling-house. The house is in fact uninhabitable. A would never have entered into the bargain if he had known the fact. A has no remedy, and the position is the same whether B knew the facts or not, so long as he made no representation or gave no warranty. [page 447] buys a roadside garage business from B abutting on a public thoroughfare: unknown to A, but known to B, it has already been decided to construct a bypass road which will divert substantially the whole of the traffic from passing A’s garage. Again A has no remedy. All these cases involve hardship on A and benefit B, as most people would say, unjustly. They can be supported on the ground that it is of paramount importance that contracts should be observed, and that if parties honestly comply with the essentials of the formation of contracts — ie, agree in the same terms on the same subject matter — they are bound, and must rely on the stipulations of the contract for protection from the effect of facts unknown to them.
Lord Thankerton said:81 The phrase ‘underlying assumption by the parties’, as applied to the subject matter of a contract, may be too widely interpreted so as to include something which one of the parties had not necessarily in his mind at the time of the contract; in my opinion it can only properly relate to something which both must necessarily have accepted in their minds as an essential and integral element of the subject matter. In the present case, however probable it may be, we are not necessarily forced to that assumption.
He thought that, in the present case, it was not an inevitable inference that Lever Bros ‘regarded the indefeasibility of the service agreements as an essential and integral element in the subject matter of the bargain’.82 [20-23] Identifying the subject matter. The test of identification of the contract’s ‘subject matter’ is one which reserves considerable latitude to the judge. For example, in Scott v Coulson,83 which involved a contract for the sale of a life policy, both parties mistakenly believed that the assured was still alive but he had died. Although the contract and assignment were set aside in equity, Vaughan Williams LJ suggested that the vendor might have contented himself with proceedings at law, and that recourse to equity was unnecessary. Apparently, the insurer’s promise to pay a sum when a death should occur in the future, and an existing liability to pay the sum were regarded as totally different in kind. However, it might be argued that the subject matter in Scott v Coulson was
simply the insurer’s contract to pay a specified sum, and the fact that the life assured had already dropped might, like the defeasibility of the service agreements in Bell v Lever Bros Ltd,84 have been left out of account. In that case, Lord Thankerton thought it clear that the subject matter in Scott v Coulson was ‘a policy still current with a surrender value’,85 but it is doubtful whether the assumed indefeasibility of the service agreements in [page 448] that case was any less influential in the formation of the termination contract than was the assumed currency of the policy in Scott v Coulson. [20-24] Impact of Bell v Lever Bros. Cases and academic writings since Bell v Lever Bros Ltd86 show that it has not greatly elucidated the nature and effect of operative common mistake at common law. Although the case recognised that in some cases a contract might be void for common mistake in relation to the quality of the subject matter, the bulk of the cases deal with the possibility of equitable relief.87 In Taylor v Johnson88 the High Court recognised the authority of Lord Atkin’s speech89 in Bell v Lever Bros, for the proposition that the formation of contracts is to be determined objectively, with the consequence that, until the objective approach is displaced, there is a contract which remains binding unless and until it is set aside for fraud, failure of an agreed condition precedent or on some equitable ground. The theme of the Australian cases, beginning with McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission,90 is that although the speech of Lord Atkin is a correct statement of the law, the test stated is so rarely satisfied as to be of marginal significance. Nevertheless, there are English cases, the application of which in Australia must be regarded as doubtful, where the test in Bell v Lever Bros has been satisfied. In Associated Japanese Bank (International) Ltd v Credit du Nord SA91 one Bennett, acting fraudulently, purported to sell four non-existent machines to the bank. The bank leased the machines back to Bennett and Credit du Nord (the guarantors) guaranteed Bennett’s performance of the lease. When Bennett defaulted the bank sought to enforce the guarantee. The existence of the machines was an important matter for the guarantors, who would not have entered into the contract if they had known the true position. Relying on a clause which required the guarantors’ consent to any substitution of the goods
comprised in the lease, Steyn J held that there was an express condition precedent in the contract of guarantee that the machines existed. Alternatively, he held that this was an implied term of the guarantee. There is considerable difficulty in supporting either basis. The express term did not state that it was a condition precedent that the goods existed. And, if it is accepted that there was an implied term that the machines existed, McRae suggests that the term was a promise rather than a condition precedent to the existence of the contract. As a third ground for his decision, Steyn J held that the contract of guarantee was void for [page 449] mistake. Although he accepted that the mere fact that the guarantors would not have entered into the contract had they known the true position was not enough to make the contract void, he said92 the ‘subject matter of the guarantee … was essentially different from what it was reasonably believed to be’. The conclusion is surprising, particularly in view of the fact that he did not consider that the lease contract was void for mistake. The guarantors’ mistake would seem to have related to a purely collateral matter, namely, the value of their rights against the goods on meeting Bennett’s liability to the bank. What the guarantors guaranteed was Bennett’s promise to pay. That promise existed and was enforceable, although the lease contract was voidable by the bank for fraud. The fact that the guarantors entered into the contract in the mistaken belief that the goods existed would not, under Australian law, render the contract void. Following McRae, the matter should be approached by asking whether the guarantors could defend the claim by relying on a breach by the bank of an (express or) implied promise that the machines existed. [20-25] One party’s mistaken motive. The subject matter of a mistake may be so much the concern of one party only that it may be categorised as a mere mistake as to the motive or reason of one party for contracting. The fact that, in so far as the matter was thought at all about by the other party, it was vaguely assumed to be correct (and to this extent ‘common’ rather than ‘unilateral’) does not afford any ground for relief.93 Indeed, it could be said that in Bell v Lever Bros Ltd94 the presumed inability to terminate the service agreements unilaterally was only the motive or reason which caused Lever Bros to make the contract.
Similarly, common mistake as to the meaning of an express contractual term (including the description of the contract’s subject matter) will not render the contract void.95
Rescission for Common Mistake [20-26] Void and voidable contracts distinguished. The analysis above has been concerned with the circumstances in which a contract may be regarded as void on the ground of common mistake. A ‘void’ contract is a nullity. The theme which developed is that a mistake, although common to both parties, does not render a contract void.96 It remains to consider whether the contract is ‘voidable’, that is, liable to be rescinded or set aside by the court. Under the modern law this must in most cases be the crucial issue. [page 450] A contract is voidable if the common mistake of the parties has also been the subject of a representation by one of the parties. In such cases the mistake of the other party is induced. Now that equitable rules govern rescission for innocent misrepresentation, ‘voidability’ is a creature of equity. These cases of induced mistake were therefore dealt with under the heading of misrepresentation.97 More relevant to the present context are suggestions that mistake may render a contract voidable on equitable grounds even though there is no misrepresentation. [20-27] Origin of the modern law. There is, superficially at least, respectable authority for a jurisdiction to set aside a contract on the ground of common mistake as to a substantial matter. In Cooper v Phibbs98 there was a lease of a salmon fishery which the parties believed to belong to the lessor, but which was subsequently discovered to belong already to the lessee.99 It was ordered that the lease be set aside on the ground of the parties’ common mistake. Although the lease document had been incapable of conveying any interest to the lessee, the lessee had had the benefit of a period of occupation of a small piece of land owned by the lessor, and the lessor had improved the premises. Accordingly, rescission was on terms as to payment of an occupation rent to the lessor and a lien to the lessor for the improvements. Another ground for the rescission was that the lessee had been led into the lease by a pre-contract misrepresentation.
The general test as to the nature and quality of the mistake which will ground intervention is less stringent than that applicable at common law.100 [20-28] Justification for relief. The jurisdiction predicates the existence of a valid contract. Although it has been enlarged as the common law doctrine of common mistake has been narrowed, it cannot be compelled to be exercised and will not be exercised where the rights of innocent third parties have intervened, where restitutio in integrum is no longer possible, or where there has been an affirmation of the contract or even delay by the mistaken party.101 However, mere ‘difficulty’ in restoring the parties exactly to their original condition, and acquiescence where the acquiescing party was ignorant of the mistake, will not preclude rescission.102 The assumption of this jurisdiction was justified by reference to equity’s established role of relieving against fraud in the broadest sense. In the contemplation of equity it would be ‘fraud’ in the case of an executory contract, to allow the contract to remain enforceable at law,103 and in the case of an executed contract to allow one party to retain the benefit of the other’s performance.104 It is easier for a court to intervene where the [page 451] contract is still executory than where, for example, it has been executed by a conveyance of property and payment of price.105 The jurisdiction to set aside, like the discretion to refuse specific performance,106 is large and flexible, and based on the ‘injustice’ or ‘inequity’ which would occur if the court did not intervene.107 But this makes it difficult to define and to exercise with consistency. [20-29] Modern reformulation. In Solle v Butcher108 Lord Denning attempted to synthesise the authorities. The case concerned a lease of a flat and garage. The flat had been let at a ‘standard rent’ of £140 per year in 1939. Because the flat had been reconstructed by the landlords and the lease included the garage, the parties believed that the lease would be unaffected by the Rent Restriction Acts. Even on the assumption that it was still ‘rent-controlled’, it could be lawfully let for £250 per year, provided the landlords first gave notice of increases based on improvements. The subject lease was indeed at a rental of £250 but notices of increase were not given first since the parties assumed that the landlords’
structural work made the flat not the same dwelling as that which had been rentcontrolled. Subsequently, the tenant sought a declaration that the standard rent of the flat was £140 and that he should get a refund of all rent which he had paid in excess of the amount. The English Court of Appeal held unanimously that the identity of the premises had not changed and that the tenant was not precluded from relying on the Act. But the parties had addressed their minds to the identity question, and since Denning and Bucknill LJJ held109 that it was a material issue, the landlords were entitled to have the lease set aside upon such terms as the court thought fit. Bucknill LJ observed that there was no merit in the tenant’s case and that since the lease was for a period of seven years, it involved considerable hardship to the landlords. Denning LJ said:110 In order to see whether the lease can be avoided for this mistake it is necessary to remember that mistake is of two kinds: first, mistake which renders the contract void, that is, a nullity from the beginning, which is the kind of mistake which was dealt with by the courts of common law; and, secondly, mistake which renders the contract not void, but voidable, that is, liable to be set aside on such terms as the court thinks fit, which is the kind of mistake which was dealt with by the courts of equity. Much of the difficulty which has attended this subject has arisen because, before the fusion of law and equity, the courts of common law, in order to do justice in the case in hand, extended this doctrine of mistake beyond its proper limits and held contracts to be void which were really only voidable, a process which was capable of being attended with much injustice to third persons who had bought goods or otherwise committed themselves on the faith that
[page 452] there was a contract … Since the fusion of law and equity there is no reason to continue this process, and it will be found that only those contracts are now held void in which the mistake was such as to prevent the formation of any contract at all.
In Denning LJ’s view:111 A contract is … liable in equity to be set aside if the parties were under a common misapprehension either as to facts or as to their relative and respective rights, provided that the misapprehension was fundamental and that the party seeking to set it aside was not himself at fault.
Denning LJ, with whom Bucknill LJ agreed in this respect, proposed giving the tenant a choice between submitting to rescission or having a lease at the rental of £250 which would have been payable if the landlords had given the necessary notices. Other orders required that if the tenant accepted the alternative of rescission, he would pay a reasonable sum for use and occupation and mesne profits. The equitable doctrine of common mistake, broadly as formulated by Denning
LJ, was recognised or accepted in several other English cases.112 There are also cases in New Zealand and Canada in which it has been applied.113 It has also been applied in Australia.114 The fact that there appear to be many authorities supporting the approach of Denning LJ in Solle v Butcher should not be taken as implying that the law is settled. There are at least three very significant points. First, many of the English cases in which Solle has been treated as good law involved Lord Denning.115 Second, it is difficult to reconcile these cases with Bell v Lever Bros Ltd,116 unless it is assumed that the case was solely concerned with the issue of voidness.117 There is, for example, a strong similarity between the facts of Bell v Lever Bros and those of Magee v Pennine Insurance Co Ltd.118 In that case an insured and his insurer agreed to compromise a claim under the policy, overlooking that the policy was voidable for non-disclosure by the insured in the proposal form. The English Court of Appeal held that the compromise contract could be set aside on the ground of common mistake as to a matter fundamental to that contract. It seems that the two cases can be reconciled only on the view that the House of Lords was confining its attention to the common law relating to operative mistake. Yet several dicta in the opinions suggest otherwise.119 [page 453] Third, although Australian law accepts that there are cases in which rescission may be obtained on the ground of common mistake in relation to a fundamental matter, it is by no means clear that the formulation of Lord Denning in Solle is an accurate statement of the legal requirements.120 Given these difficulties it is perhaps not surprising that in Great Peace Shipping Ltd v Tsavliris Salvage (International) Ltd121 the English Court of Appeal chose not to follow Solle. The plaintiff’s ship (the Great Peace) was thought to be within a few hours’ sailing of the defendant’s vessel (the Cape Providence) which was in difficulty. It was not. Indeed, another vessel (the Nordfarer) was closer. Although the defendant contracted with the plaintiff to provide assistance, when it discovered that the Nordfarer was closer it told the plaintiff that its assistance was not required. However, the plaintiff would not agree and successfully sued to recover the agreed fee. Clearly, the contract was not void for mistake. It is also difficult to see how the mistake was ‘fundamental’ in the sense which Lord Denning used the word in Solle. In so far as the court
thought otherwise, it could see no basis in authority for the principle of rescission applied in Solle. In its view, that decision could only be supported if Bell v Lever Bros Ltd was wrongly decided.122 That was clearly unacceptable as a matter of precedent. However, the inconsistency perceived in Great Peace Shipping has not been shared in the Australian cases. Moreover, the rationale for Solle is not mistake per se. Relief by way of rescission must be based on proof of unconscionable conduct. The defendant must be taking an unconscionable advantage of a mistake for which the plaintiff was not responsible. The Australian cases support the view that if such conduct is proved the contract may be rescinded. [20-30] Requirement of fundamental mistake. Solle v Butcher123 relies on a concept of fundamental mistake. Although it is clear that this is broader than the common law concept, since where mistake is operative at common law the contract is void, it is doubtful whether the mere fact of fundamental mistake is ever sufficient. For example, the courts are reluctant to relieve a purchaser of land in view of the express contractual provisions for investigation of, requisitions on and acceptance of the vendor’s title prior to conveyance.124 Certainly this was the view of the High Court in Svanosio v McNamara.125 [page 454] It will be recalled126 that the hotel which was the subject of the transaction stood partly on adjoining Crown land. Apart from relief based on the allegation that the contract was void, the purchaser sought orders setting aside the agreements and conveyance, and for repayment of the price. If the circumstance of the vendor’s lack of title had been discovered before conveyance, the purchasers might not have been compelled to accept the title.127 Similarly, the purchasers might not have obtained a decree for specific performance requiring the vendors to obtain and convey that title which they did not have,128 unless, perhaps, compensation was provided by the vendor. But as the contract had been completed, there was no question of the vendor seeking relief to enforce the contract. The conveyance and the transfer of the liquor licence were both effective, neither was void. Equitable principles may in certain circumstances be relied upon to set aside a conveyance and transfer. However, the cases involving contracts for the sale of land in which relief is granted after conveyance were, in Svanosio v McNamara,
limited to cases in which the vendor had no title at all. The advantage of being able to invoke equitable principles is that orders for adjustments and allowances can be made in addition to the recovery of money paid. The court held that there was no basis for setting aside the conveyance. In the joint judgment of McTiernan, Williams and Webb JJ it is said that the only authority for the proposition that any executed contract for the sale of property could be rescinded for innocent material misrepresentation or common mistake is Solle v Butcher, but the judgments had there expressly excluded contracts for the sale of land. Dixon and Fullagar JJ deduced from the cases the principle that equity will not grant relief after conveyance unless there has been fraud or ‘a total failure of consideration or what amounts practically to a total failure of consideration’.129 Svanosio v McNamara was distinguished in Lukacs v Wood.130 Land was described in a contract of sale and in a transfer of land. The purchaser, for the price of three vacant allotments, became the registered proprietor of two of the vacant lots and a fourth lot on which was erected a block of residential flats. Jacobs J held that there had been a common mistake as to the substance of what was purchased, and ordered the purchaser to execute [page 455] and deliver a transfer of the improved parcel in exchange for delivery of an executed transfer of the third vacant allotment. [20-31] Requirement of equitable fraud. A right to approach the court for an order rescinding the contract relies on an element of ‘equitable fraud’. The question that arises is when that will be present in mistake cases in the absence of misrepresentation. In Svanosio v McNamara131 Dixon and Fullagar JJ observed132 that it was because ‘there was no fraud or misrepresentation’, that the position of the parties depended on the terms of the contract. After citing Solle v Butcher,133 they said:134 ‘Mistake’ might, of course, afford a ground on which equity would refuse specific performance of a contract, and there may be cases of ‘mistake’ in which it would be so inequitable that a party should be held to his contract that equity would set it aside. No rule can be laid down a priori as to such cases: see an article by Professor R A Blackburn in (1955) 7 Res Judicatae 43. But we would agree with Professor Shatwell (1955) 33 Can Bar Rev 164 at 186, 187 that it is difficult to conceive any circumstances in which equity could properly give relief by setting aside the contract unless there has been fraud or misrepresentation or a condition can be found expressed or implied in the contract.
This passage denies that relief may be granted in the absence of fraud. What
did they mean by ‘fraud’? Any argument that they intended to exclude the broad concept of fraud in equity, which includes unconscionable dealing, is precluded by Taylor v Johnson135 where Mason ACJ, Murphy and Deane JJ said136 that if Dixon and Fullagar JJ did not intend to include unconscionable dealing, ‘we do not share the difficulty to which they referred. To the contrary, it seems to us that the reported cases, including Solle v Butcher … readily provide concrete examples of such circumstances’. Therefore, not only is it clear that there is a jurisdiction in Australia to set aside a contract on the ground of common mistake, but also Solle v Butcher can be taken as a valid illustration of the jurisdiction. However, in order for the contract to be liable to be set aside there must be circumstances which render it unconscionable for the party who seeks to uphold the contract to have it enforced. [20-32] Relevance of ‘fault’. Lord Denning’s formulation in Solle v Butcher137 requires not only that the parties’ common mistake be ‘fundamental’ but also that the party seeking to have the contract set aside not be ‘at fault’.138 Something less than great care on the part of at least one party will characterise most instances of common mistake, but apparently this will not defeat that party.139 In the New Zealand case, Waring v S J [page 456] Brentnall Ltd,140 Chilwell J suggested that ‘unconscionable’ should be substituted for ‘at fault’. It may be, however, that the concept is broader than this, including some cases of carelessness.141
Mutual Mistake Mutual Mistake Rendering Contract Void [20-33] Concordance of offer and acceptance. Where offer and acceptance are literally and in their true meanings different, no contract is concluded. But it is their significations — the one to the other — that are essential. If these coincide there is a contract notwithstanding any literal discrepancy. More importantly for present purposes, if they do not coincide, there is no contract though they may literally correspond.
[20-34] Illustrations. In Raffles v Wichelhaus142 A agreed to buy and B agreed to sell cotton to arrive ‘ex Peerless from Bombay’. In fact there were two ships named ‘Peerless’ due to sail from Bombay: one to sail in October, the other in December. The goods were shipped on the December ship but the buyer refused to accept them, contending that he had meant to buy cotton via the earlier ship. The seller sued for damages for non-acceptance and argued that it was not open to the buyer to adduce evidence of his actual intention: that all that mattered was that the seller had performed in accordance with the literal wording of the contract. The court rejected the seller’s argument. This case does not contradict the objective theory of contract for the important reason that it was not possible to say that the only reasonable interpretation to be placed upon the words used by one party was that advanced by one party or the other. Where there is insoluble ambiguity and the evidence shows that both parties meant different things, there is no contract. On the other hand, the evidence may show that the only reasonable construction to be placed on words or conduct was that contended for by one party and in this event there will be a contract conforming to that construction. In the context of the facts in Raffles v Wichelhaus, if the evidence had shown that a reasonable person in the buyer’s position should have construed the seller’s offer as referring to the December Peerless, the buyer would be bound accordingly even though subjectively he intended by his acceptance to buy cotton via the earlier ship.143 This is the objective theory of contract at work.144 It is not clear that the court actually held the contract to be void for mutual mistake. Although the case is certainly open to this interpretation,145 a better rationale may be [page 457] that there was no contract, since the agreement was void for uncertainty. An alternative argument is that the contract was not void at all, because the construction of the contract showed that the seller had agreed to sell cotton via the earlier ship. If so, the buyer was entitled to sue for breach of contract. It was not necessary for the court to decide this issue: all that was in question was whether the seller could sue. A second case is Scriven Bros & Co v Hindley & Co.146 The plaintiff instructed an auctioneer to sell a number of bags of hemp and tow. Although the goods were described in the auction catalogue, it did not disclose which lot
comprised hemp and which comprised tow. Moreover, the same shipping mark (the mark of the ship which had brought the bales to England) was entered against both lots. Samples of both lots were on view but the defendants did not examine them and relied on their earlier inspection of the samples of the hemp in the plaintiff’s show room. When the lots representing tow were put up, their buyer made a bid, intending to bid for hemp. The amount of the bid was an extravagant price for tow. The lots were knocked down to the defendants, whom the plaintiff sued for the price. The jury’s findings were that: (1) the auctioneer intended to sell tow; (2) the defendants’ buyer intended to bid for hemp; (3) the auctioneer believed that the bid had been made under the influence of a mistake but had reasonable grounds for believing that the mistake was as to the value of the goods rather than as to their identity; and (4) the form of the catalogue and a careless inspection by the defendants’ manager had both contributed to the mistake. A T Lawrence J found simply that findings (2) and (3) showed that the parties were never ad idem as to the subject matter of the sale and that therefore there was no contract. He also said that the plaintiffs could succeed only if they could show that the defendants were, in the circumstances, estopped from setting up their true state of mind. The result can be supported on the ground that it was not possible to say which of the two commodities was the subject of the ‘sale’. In such cases of true ambiguity, it is proper to say that offer and acceptance do not coincide, notwithstanding appearances to the contrary. It is for a person seeking to enforce a contract to show that the terms contracted for were so clear and unambiguous that the other party cannot be heard to say that there was a mistake.147 [20-35] Mistake as to legal effect. It is important to distinguish from cases of the type discussed above148 those where neither the subject matter nor the terminology of the contract is in dispute, the sole question being ‘the legal effect of the mutually agreed words in their accepted [page 458] signification’.149 There is neither operative common mistake nor operative
mutual mistake in such cases. In Goldsbrough Mort & Co Ltd v Quinn150 a contract for the sale and purchase of 2590 acres of land comprising freehold, conditional purchase and conditional lease was agreed for a price of £1.10.0 an acre ‘calculated on a freehold basis’. The purchaser sought specific performance on the basis that out of the sum of £1.10.0 an amount necessary to convert the conditional purchase and conditional lease lands to freehold would be paid to the Crown. The vendor gave evidence that he had contracted on the footing of his understanding that the price meant that he would receive £1.10.0 cash per acre. The High Court held that the expression ‘calculated on a freehold basis’ was plain and unambiguous and that there was a binding contract importing the construction advanced by the purchaser. This would provide the basis on which the purchaser might obtain damages for the vendor’s wrongful repudiation but the court went further and held that there was no reason why it should, in the exercise of its discretion, decline to grant the discretionary equitable remedy of specific performance of the contract as sought by the purchaser. In particular, there was no evidence of fraud, misleading conduct or hardship. Cases of the Goldsbrough Mort type have been common. These are cases in which a party has contracted under an erroneous understanding of the meaning (or effect) of contractual words or even of the impact of the contract as a whole. Since, ex hypothesi, the court in such a case is holding that the other party’s construction is the only right one, the case does not involve mutual mistake. Rather, one party only is mistaken. In such cases the mistaken party must, in order to establish that the mistake affected the validity or enforceability of the contract, prove that the other party knew or had reason to suspect that there was mistake, or contributed to the mistake.151
Rescission for Mutual Mistake [20-36] Introduction. In considering the question of rescission, in order that the circumstances should not be categorised as operative unilateral mistake, it must be assumed that the unmistaken party: did not know or have reason to suspect that the other party was mistaken; and did not contribute to the mistake. These elements of themselves imply that mutual mistake is unlikely to give rise to issues to be determined by equitable principles of rescission.
[20-37] Equitable relief for mutual mistake. If mutual mistake prevents a contract from coming into existence,152 no remedy is available to enforce the contract. Thus, where appropriate, orders may be made [page 459] declaring that no contract was formed and giving consequential relief, such as setting aside documents and awarding restitution of money paid. Where mutual mistake does not render a contract void, there are suggestions of an ability to refuse specific performance. However, these statements have referred, if not to the necessity of outright ambiguity, at least to a requirement that the mistake must have been a reasonable one.153 For example, in Swaisland v Dearsley154 Sir John Romilly MR, in refusing to grant a vendor specific performance, said:155 [I]f it appears upon the evidence that there was, in the description of the property, a matter on which a person might bona fide make a mistake, and he swears positively that he did make such mistake, and his evidence is not disproved, this court cannot enforce the specific performance against him. If there appear on the particulars no ground for the mistake, if no man with his senses about him could have misapprehended the character of the parcels, then I do not think it is sufficient for the purchaser to swear that he made a mistake, or that he did not understand what he was about.
It is doubtful whether such cases involve anything other than common or unilateral mistake. The better view is that mutual mistake has no operation in equity beyond that at law, and that cases where one party’s construction is upheld by the court as correct are to be dealt with under the rubric of unilateral mistake.
Unilateral Mistake General [20-38] Introduction. The circumstance that one party — but not the other — is mistaken is not of itself a reason for saying that the contract is void or that a right of rescission is available. Some additional factor must be shown. That factor will be the combination of knowledge that the other is mistaken and an element of responsibility for that mistake.
The analysis below draws on two perspectives: (1) whether the effect is to make the contract void or voidable; and (2) whether the mistake relates to the identity of the other party or the terms of the contract. [20-39] Relationship between mutual and unilateral mistake. In cases of operative mutual mistake the parties are at cross-purposes and neither can be blamed for this: because of ambiguity neither party’s construction can be held to be ‘the correct one’. Once one party’s construction is held correct, the unmistaken party can insist on performance unless the case is one of unilateral mistake, that is, there was knowledge of the mistake, reasons for suspecting that the other [page 460] party was mistaken or contribution to the mistake.156 It is one party’s ‘involvement’ that displaces the normal operation of the contract.
Unilateral Mistake Rendering Contract Void157 Mistake as to identity — parties at a distance [20-40] General. Not every unilateral mistake relating to a contracting party will render the contract void. Just as a buyer’s mistake as to the quality and value of the goods bought will normally be inconsequential, so will a seller’s mistake as to the character and creditworthiness of the buyer. It matters not that the buyer or seller would not have contracted but for the mistake. Mistake as to the identity of a contracting party will be unilateral, and usually arise as a result of a fraudulent misrepresentation. Given those circumstances, there is no reason to doubt the ability of the mistaken party to rescind the contract. What is in issue is whether the mistake makes the contract void. [20-41] Offer can only be accepted by offeree. A’s offer to B cannot be accepted by C so as to create a contract between A and C. In Boulton v Jones158 an action was brought for the price of goods sold. The defendants had been in
the habit of dealing with one Brocklehurst. Indeed, he owed them money. They sent a written order for goods, addressed expressly to Brocklehurst. But, unbeknown to the defendants, he had sold his business to the plaintiff (an employee) the very same day. The plaintiff struck out Brocklehurst’s name on the order and substituted his own. He then purported to fulfil the order without advising the defendants that the goods had been supplied by himself rather than by Brocklehurst. When the plaintiff asked for payment, the defendants said they knew nothing of him. His action for the price failed, notwithstanding that in the result the defendants were not contractually bound to pay anyone for the goods.159 Pollock CB said:160 It is a rule of law, that if a person intends to contract with A, B cannot give himself any rights under it. Here the order in writing was given to Brocklehurst. Possibly Brocklehurst might have adopted the act of the plaintiff in supplying the goods, and maintained an action for their price. But since the plaintiff has chosen to sue, the only course the defendants could take was to plead that there was no contract with him.
The difficulty with the case is why the offer was interpreted as being personal to Brocklehurst, since it would normally be a reasonable construction of an offer made to a business that it is open for acceptance by [page 461] whoever carries on the business. The case would have been different if it had been addressed to ‘the proprietor’ (of the business) or to the business itself or to whom it might concern or to no one in particular. There is, in other words, a tension with the objective approach to contract formation. Bramwell B said:161 ‘When a contract is made, in which the personality of the contracting party is or may be of importance, as a contract with a man to write a book, or the like, or where there might be a set-off, no other person can interpose and adopt the contract’. This approach, which requires a consideration of whether the contract was of such a kind that the identity of the other party could be expected to be an important consideration to the offeror, treats the defendants’ entitlement to a setoff against Brocklehurst as crucial in the interpretation of the offer. The availability of a set-off against Brocklehurst may explain why the defendants addressed their order to him expressly. And it may be that the plaintiff knew or ought to have known of the set-off. Given an objective approach to contract formation, without that knowledge the case would have been differently
decided.162 The leading case is Cundy v Lindsay.163 One Blenkarn ordered in writing goods from Lindsays. On the order he gave his identity as ‘Blenkarn & Co, 37 Wood St and 5 Little Love Lane, Cheapside’ and signed so that his name appeared as ‘Blenkiron & Co’. There was in fact a respectable firm by that name which carried on business at 123 Wood Street, Cheapside. Lindsays knew their name and believed that they were dealing with them. Lindsays dispatched the goods, without checking the address, to ‘Blenkiron & Co, 37 Wood Street’. The goods were received by the rogue Blenkarn at that address and he sold some of them to an unsuspecting third party, Cundy. Blenkarn did not pay for the goods and was indeed convicted of obtaining them by false pretences. In the result, Lindsays sued Cundy in tort for conversion of their goods, and the argument was that the alleged contract with the rogue was void, so that Cundy did not obtain ownership of the goods. The jury found that the mode of the letter led and was intended to lead Lindsays to believe that they were dealing with Blenkiron & Co. As to Blenkarn, in the emphatic words of Lord Cairns:164 Of him they knew nothing, and of him they never thought. With him they never intended to deal. Their minds never, even for an instant of time rested upon him, and as between him and them there was no consensus of mind which could lead to any agreement, or any contract whatever.
Lords Hatherley and Penzance observed that cases of personal dealing, that is, cases where a rogue deals face to face with the other party but misrepresents himself or herself, were different. Lord Penzance added that the mere fact that the goods were addressed to No 37 was not enough, in [page 462] the light of the other facts, to show an offer to deal with whoever might be at that address. There being no contract, Lindsays were successful. Cundy v Lindsay is not a satisfactory decision. The House of Lords did not adequately dispose of the argument that Lindsays intended to deal with the person doing business — whoever it was — at 37 Wood St. It may be suggested that undue prominence was given to the subjective intention of Lindsays. There is no analysis of whether they should have taken steps to verify the address, and the result was that a party took advantage of its own mistake to defeat the rights of an innocent third party.
[20-42] Self-styled agent. Having some similarity with Cundy v Lindsay,165 but determinable on the simple ground of lack of authority, are cases where there is a fraudulent misrepresentation by a rogue, not as a known existing entity, but as the agent of such an entity authorised to contract on its behalf.166 There is no contract in such a case, whether the parties are at a distance or face to face.167 [20-43] Non-existent party. In the cases already referred to, there was in existence a firm with which the mistaken party thought it was dealing. So it could be said that the offer was addressed to that firm and could not be accepted by anyone else. The facts were otherwise in King’s Norton Metal Co Ltd v Edridge Merrett & Co Ltd.168 One Wallis sent a letter to the plaintiffs who were metal manufacturers at King’s Norton seeking a quotation for the supply of metal. The letter purported to come from ‘Hallam & Co’ on a letterhead with a representation of a large factory with a number of chimneys and a statement in one corner that Hallam & Co had branches and depots at certain places. The quotation was sent, an order was lodged, and the goods were dispatched but their price was never paid. However, Wallis sold them to the defendants whom the plaintiffs sued for damages for conversion of what was allegedly still the plaintiffs’ property. The English Court of Appeal held that the plaintiffs had intended to contract with ‘the writer of the letters’, whoever that might be, so that a contract existed between them and Wallis. The court noted that the result might have been different, and governed by Cundy v Lindsay,169 if it could have been shown that there were two separate entities called respectively ‘Wallis’ and ‘Hallam & Co’. It is scarcely satisfactory from either the defrauded party’s or the innocent third party’s viewpoint that their rights should depend on the precise form which the rogue’s misrepresentation takes. A possible answer to the question, which of these two innocent parties should suffer, would be to provide by legislation for their sharing of the loss on an equitable basis [page 463] having regard to the extent to which, by their carelessness, they may have facilitated the fraud.170
Mistake as to identity — parties face to face
[20-44] General. Mistake as to identity can occur not only where a contract is made by correspondence, or on the telephone, but also where it is made in a face-to-face negotiation. In that context a distinction has been suggested between mistake as to identity and mistake as to the qualifications or characteristics of a person. The suggestion is that mistake as to identity will prevent the victim’s offer from being accepted by the rogue so as to create a contract, whereas a mistake as to qualifications or characteristics will (at most) merely render the contract voidable. A distinction has also been made between misrepresentations which induce the victim to contract and those which merely induce the victim to extend credit terms to the rogue, or to give the rogue immediate possession of goods. The cases are impossible to reconcile, but it is suggested that since it is the victim’s apparent intention to contract with the person physically present, there exists a sufficient element of assent on which a contract can come into being, albeit a contract voidable at the instance of the representee. A starting point for analysis of these cases is the undoubted presumption that where parties appear to contract, there is a contract between the parties. In order for that presumption to be rebutted there must be admissible evidence that there was no such intention. [20-45] Cases in which the ‘contract’ has been held void. The decision in Lake v Simmons171 turned on whether a jeweller had ‘entrusted’ necklets to a ‘customer’, as those words were used in an exception clause in the jeweller’s insurance policy. The person who obtained the necklets was a woman who claimed to represent her husband (he had no knowledge of the matter) and her sister’s husband (sister and husband were fictitious). It was held by the House of Lords that the jeweller’s intention was not to entrust to or deal with her as his customer and that there was no contract between them.172 In Ingram v Little173 two sisters, Elsie and Hilda Ingram, and a Miss Badger with whom they lived, advertised their car for sale. A swindler called on the sisters. After a drive in the car they agreed on a price of £717. Elsie declined to accept payment by cheque and would only sell for cash. She said that the deal was finished and made as to walk out of the room. The man said he was ‘Mr P G M Hutchinson’ and lived at Stanstead [page 464]
House, Stanstead Road, Caterham. While the others continued talking, Hilda went to the local post office and returned saying that she had checked that name and address in the phone directory. Elsie then agreed to accept payment by cheque and the car was handed over. Within a few days the rogue sold the car to the defendant, who purchased in good faith. The rogue’s cheque was dishonoured, and as he could not be found the plaintiffs sued the defendant to recover the car or its value. There was a division of opinion in the English Court of Appeal which held (Devlin LJ dissenting) that there was no contract with the rogue. The majority acknowledged that in the case of contracts made face to face there is a presumption that each intends to deal with the person physically present, and that the presumption can be rebutted only by clear evidence. Reference was made to the fact that any agreement to sell which may have been made immediately after the drive in the car was expressly repudiated by Elsie when the rogue showed his intention not to pay by cash, and that the subsequent discussion and agreement proceeded only on the footing that the sisters were dealing with P G M Hutchinson. Both inquired whether the rogue should have understood the plaintiffs as intending to sell to him and, as was inevitable, answered in the negative. [20-46] Cases in which the contract has been held to be voidable. In Phillips v Brooks Ltd,174 one North visited the plaintiff jeweller’s shop and selected pearls and an emerald ring. While writing out his cheque he said, ‘You will see who I am: I am Sir George Bullough’ and gave his address as in St James’ Square. The plaintiff had heard of Sir George Bullough as a man of means and checked in a directory that the address given was correct. The plaintiff allowed North to take the ring away. North pledged the ring with the unsuspecting defendant pawnbrokers. The cheque was returned by the bank marked ‘no account’ and North was convicted of obtaining the ring from the plaintiff by false pretences. The plaintiff sued the pawnbrokers for the return of the ring or its value, and claimed damages in tort for its detention. He gave evidence that he thought he was contracting with Sir George Bullough, that if he had known who the man really was he would not have let him have the ring, and that he did not intend to deal with anyone other than Sir George Bullough. However, Horridge J held that this uncontradicted evidence of the plaintiff’s subjective intention did not conclude the matter. He inferred that the plaintiff intended to deal with the person physically present in his shop, but that he would not have done so but for the
fraudulent misrepresentations. The contract was voidable only, and the property in the ring passed to North who could effectively pass it on to anyone who acquired the ring in good faith, for value and without notice of the fraud, before any attempt by the plaintiff to avoid the contract.175 [page 465] In Lewis v Averay176 a swindler, after inspecting and driving the plaintiff’s car which had been advertised for sale in the newspaper, identified himself to the plaintiff and his fiancée as Richard Greene, star of the television series ‘The Adventures of Robin Hood’. After a price of £450 was agreed, he wrote out a cheque for that amount and signed it, ‘R A Green’. He wanted to take the car at once. The plaintiff asked for proof of identity. The rogue produced a special admission pass to Pinewood Studios with an official stamp on it. It bore the name ‘Richard A Green’, an address and a photograph of the rogue. Lewis handed over the car, the log book, a Ministry of Transport test certificate and a receipt for £450 in favour of ‘Richard A Green’. The rogue sold the car to an unsuspecting Averay. After the bank told Lewis that the cheque was worthless (the rogue had stolen a cheque book and written on a cheque from it) Lewis sued Averay in tort for conversion of the car. The English Court of Appeal unanimously held that there was a contract, albeit a voidable one. Since it had not been avoided prior to the time of the contract between the rogue and Averay, the latter obtained a good title to the vehicle.177 Lord Denning MR and Phillimore LJ thought that there was nothing to rebut the presumption of an intention to deal with the person physically present. Megaw LJ decided for the defendant on the ground that Lewis had failed to prove that he had regarded the identity of the person before him as a matter of vital importance: he viewed the mistake as one going to a mere attribute of the rogue, namely, his creditworthiness. In a forthright manner, the Master of the Rolls condemned fine distinctions between fraudulent misrepresentations which induce the making of a contract and those made after contract which induce a seller to part with possession; and between mistakes as to identity and those as to attributes. He said:178 As I listened to the argument in this case, I felt it wrong that an innocent purchaser (who knew nothing of what passed between the seller and the rogue) should have his title depend on such refinements. After all, he has acted with complete circumspection and in entire good faith: whereas it was the seller who let the rogue have the goods and thus enabled him to commit the fraud. I do not, therefore, accept
the theory that a mistake as to identity renders a contract void. I think the true principle is that which underlies the decision of this court in King’s Norton Metal Co Ltd v Edridge Merrett & Co Ltd179 and of Horridge J in Phillips v Brooks Ltd180 which has stood for these last 50 years. It is this: When two parties have come to a contract — or rather what appears, on the face of it, to be a contract — the fact that one party is mistaken as to the identity of the other does not mean that there is no contract, or that the contract is a nullity and void from the beginning. It only means that the contract is voidable, that is, liable to be set aside at the
[page 466] instance of the mistaken person, so long as he does so before third parties have in good faith acquired rights under it.
Taken literally, the statement of principle by Lord Denning in Lewis is inconsistent with Cundy v Lindsay.181 It has accordingly come under criticism. In Shogun Finance Ltd v Hudson182 a rogue, pretending to be a man named Patel, entered into a hire-purchase contract to purchase a motor vehicle from a finance company. The contract was in writing and executed by the rogue in the name Patel. Prior to the contract the finance company had made credit checks on Patel, and entered into the contract with the rogue because these were satisfactory. The rogue then purported to sell the vehicle to an innocent ‘purchaser’. Under the hire-purchase legislation the finance company would have no claim against the purchaser if the rogue was the ‘debtor’ under the hirepurchase contract. A majority of the House of Lords held that the hire-purchase agreement was a nullity. Because the contract purported to be with Patel, and because Patel did not sign the document or authorise anyone to do so on his behalf, it was not binding on anyone. On that basis, the rogue was not the hirer named in the agreement and was therefore not a debtor. Accordingly, the legislation did not apply to protect the purchaser.183 [20-47] Australian cases. There have been surprisingly few Australian cases on mistake as to identity. In Porter v Latec Finance (Qld) Pty Ltd,184 Kitto J touched on the matter inconclusively. Windeyer J referred to the ‘now somewhat shaky’ authority185 of Phillips v Brooks Ltd.186 He considered ‘the real or supposed distinction between a unilateral mistake as to the identity of a person and a unilateral mistake as to his attributes’ as lying ‘at the root of the matter’,187 and referred to Ingram v Little188 as showing how readily the same facts in this area may be susceptible of more than one interpretation. Four points must be made: (1) the judgments of Kitto and Windeyer JJ were dissenting judgments;
(2) they were delivered before Lord Denning, at least, had cast doubt on the correctness of Ingram v Little in Lewis v Averay;189 (3) the facts were not in the mould of the three English cases; and (4) to the extent that the matter has been discussed in subsequent Australian cases, Lewis v Averay has been treated as authoritative.190 [page 467] [20-48] Reconciling the cases — the search for a principle. In order to reconcile the cases, what is necessary is a principle that embraces the facts that the victim always has the intentions both of dealing with the person identified by sight and hearing and of dealing with the person whose identity that person has appropriated. There is much force in Lord Denning’s criticism of Ingram v Little191 in Lewis v Averay.192 The process of categorising a contract according to whether the identity of the other contracting party enters as an element and then inquiring into the deceived party’s subjective state of mind is foreign to the mainstream of the common law and is inconsistent with most of the other English cases studied, such as King’s Norton Metal Co Ltd v Edridge Merrett & Co Ltd.193 Indeed, if it is correct to have regard to whether the representor is telling the truth, it is difficult to see why other forms of fraud do not render contracts void. The answer, of course, is that the representor’s fraud is merely a proper basis for rescission of the contract, and not a sufficient ground for concluding that the contract was void. Moreover, in Lewis v Averay Megaw LJ did not accept the test propounded by the majority in Ingram v Little, that is, whether the rogue ought to have interpreted the promise as addressed to him or her. But he did accept the distinction between a mistake as to the rogue’s identity made when the offer was made which the victim at that time regarded as of vital importance, and a mistake as to the rogue’s attributes, such as creditworthiness. Megaw LJ’s distinction does not seem helpful. Bearing in mind that there is no authoritative decision of the High Court in this area, with one qualification, Lord Denning’s analysis in Lewis v Averay may be accepted as correct. It is consistent with Australian cases in the context of rescission for unilateral mistake as to terms.194 The one qualification is that the mere ‘appearance’ of a contract is not sufficient if there is in fact no agreement.
In other words, the perspective of an impartial bystander looking down from above cannot be applied to impose a contract where none otherwise exists. The decision in Shogun Finance Ltd v Hudson195 relies on a further distinction. In all of the other cases considered above, the alleged contract was oral. In Shogun it was written. The case supports the view that where a written contract is at issue, the parol evidence rule196 prevents evidence being given to contradict the document. The result is that evidence cannot be given to prove (as the innocent purchaser sought to do in that case) that the person identified in the written contract as a party is not the intended party.197 However, given that the rights of third parties are involved, it may be questioned whether resort to a technical rule of contract law provides an appropriate solution. [page 468]
Unilateral mistake as to terms [20-49] General. It is not every unilateral mistake of which the other party is aware that will entitle the mistaken party to relief. A seller of goods may know that the buyer is mistaken as to their qualities and value, yet is entitled to remain silent and, since no representation has been a cause of the mistake, enforce the contract.198 The proposition that one contracting party cannot rely on the other to look after his or her interests, suggested by the maxim caveat emptor (‘buyer beware’), is of general application. Assume that A sells a motor car to B, knowing that it is a 1999 model. If B buys believing that it is a 2000 model, B’s mistake will not affect the validity of the contract whether it was known to A or not. What was sold and bought was ‘A’s motor car’. If the car had been bought and sold as ‘A’s 2000 model motor car’ once again the validity of the contract would not have been affected but A would have breached a term of it by tendering in performance a car which did not correspond to the contract description. [20-50] Smith v Hughes. Smith v Hughes199 is an important illustration of the early common law’s treatment of unilateral mistake which, however, may need to be reconsidered in Australia in the light of the High Court’s decision in Taylor v Johnson.200 A seller sued his buyer for the price of oats sold and also for damages for non-
acceptance of other oats. The seller was a farmer and the defendant an owner and trainer of racehorses. The plaintiff offered to sell oats and exhibited a sample. The defendant took the sample, and wrote saying that he would take the oats at 34 shillings per quarter. Afterwards he refused to accept the oats tendered on the ground that they were ‘new’, whereas he thought he was buying ‘old’ oats. The price was high for new oats, but oats were scarce at the time. One question which the county court judge left to the jury was whether the plaintiff believed that the defendant believed, or was under the impression, that he was contracting to purchase old oats. The issue on the appeal was whether the judge’s direction was correct. The Court of Queen’s Bench held that it was not. Cockburn CJ considered that the passive acquiescence of the seller in the self-deception of the buyer did not entitle the latter to avoid the contract. He said:201 If, indeed, the buyer, instead of acting on his own opinion, had asked the question whether the oats were old or new, or had said anything which intimated his understanding that the seller was selling the oats as old oats, the case would have been wholly different; or even if he had said anything which shewed that he was not acting on his own inspection and judgment, but assumed as the foundation of the contract that the oats were old, the silence of the seller, as a means of misleading him, might have amounted to a fraudulent concealment, such as would have entitled the buyer to avoid the contract. Here, however, nothing of the sort occurs. The buyer in no way refers to the seller, but acts entirely on his own judgment.
[page 469] In dealing with the contention that the plaintiff intended to sell new oats and the defendant to buy old oats, so that there was no consensus ad idem, the Chief Justice added:202 This argument proceeds on the fallacy of confounding what was merely a motive operating on the buyer to induce him to buy with one of the essential conditions of the contract. Both parties were agreed as to the sale and purchase of this particular parcel of oats. The defendant believed the oats to be old, and was thus induced to agree to buy them, but he omitted to make their age a condition of the contract. All that can be said is, that the two minds were not ad idem as to the age of the oats; they certainly were ad idem as to the sale and purchase of them. Suppose a person to buy a horse without a warranty, believing him to be sound, and the horse turns out unsound, could it be contended that it would be open to him to say that, as he had intended to buy a sound horse, and the seller to sell an unsound one, the contract was void, because the seller must have known from the price the buyer was willing to give, or from his general habits as a buyer of horses, that he thought the horse was sound? The cases are exactly parallel.
In similar vein, Blackburn J said:203 I doubt whether the direction would bring to the minds of the jury the distinction between agreeing to
take the oats under the belief that they were old, and agreeing to take the oats under the belief that the plaintiff contracted that they were old. The difference is the same as that between buying a horse believed to be sound, and buying one believed to be warranted sound; but I doubt if it was made obvious to the jury, and I doubt this the more because I do not see much evidence to justify a finding for the defendant on the latter ground if the word ‘old’ was not used.
Hannen J’s judgment was similar.204 The language used in these passages is difficult. However, the case appears to hold that the contract would have been void for unilateral mistake as to terms if: the seller intended to sell new oats, without making any promise that the oats would be old oats; but the buyer reasonably, but mistakenly, believed not only that the oats were old oats but also that the seller promised that the oats were old oats. However, as Blackburn J acknowledged,205 if A leads B reasonably to believe that A is assenting to the terms proposed by B, A is contractually bound (whatever A’s real intention may be) if B entered into the contract on the basis of that belief. [20-51] ‘Snapping up offer’. A particular class of case which illustrates unilateral mistake as to the terms intended, known to the other party, is where an offer which would be very advantageous to the offeree is ‘snapped up’ by the offeree.206 In such cases, the terms of the offer are clear and unambiguous and the offeree accepts the offer according to its true sense. [page 470] The difficulty is that it must have been obvious that the offeror did not intend to make an offer in those terms. In Hartog v Colin & Shields207 there was a contract to sell 30,000 Argentine hare skins. The offer was mistakenly stated as being at a price per pound, the sellers’ intention having been to offer at the same price per piece. The value of a pound of the skin was approximately three times that of a piece. Moreover, the preliminary negotiations had proceeded on the footing that the price would be at so much per piece and there was evidence of a trade custom to fix the price by reference to a piece. In the buyer’s action for damages for non-delivery, the judge found that the buyer could not reasonably have supposed that the offer expressed the sellers’ intention, and so his snapping up their offer did not create a contract: ‘The offer was wrongly expressed, and
the defendants by their evidence, and by the correspondence, have satisfied me that the plaintiff could not reasonably have supposed that that offer contained the offerors’ real intention.’208 A mistaken party will not often be able to discharge the onus of showing that the other party knew or must have known that he or she intended terms different from the terms of the offer or acceptance.209
Rescission for Unilateral Mistake [20-52] General. Equitable principles and remedies may be used to give effect to the treatment of a contract void (or avoided) for unilateral mistake, for example, by declaration and consequential orders. It is also possible, in cases where the contract is neither void nor voidable, that an order for specific performance would be refused on equitable grounds.210 The important question is whether there are circumstances, falling short of those which would render a contract void or voidable under the principles discussed above, but which might induce a court to grant relief by setting the contract aside on the basis of a unilateral mistake. [20-53] Knowledge of the mistake. A contract may be set aside for a unilateral mistake which was not effective to render the contract void or voidable at common law if the plaintiff contributed to the mistake.211 There is also a line of authority suggesting that the unmistaken party may be given the choice between suffering a rescission and having the contract rectified so as to accord with the mistaken party’s understanding.212 [page 471] [20-54] Unconscionable conduct. If the cases are based on a general principle it is that a mistaken party may be accorded the right of rescission, or at least an ability to approach the court for an order setting aside the contract, even though the contract is neither void nor voidable under the principles derived from the common law, where it would be unconscionable for the other party to enforce the contract according to its terms. Knowledge of the mistake, contribution to the mistaken party’s belief (falling short of misrepresentation), or steps by which the party with knowledge deprives the mistaken party of the opportunity to discover
the true facts may, depending on the circumstances, be sufficient grounds for setting aside the contract. In Taylor v Johnson213 the High Court had to deal with a written contract for the sale of some ten acres of land. The price stated was $15,000. The vendor gave evidence that she believed and contracted on the basis that the contract provided for a price of $15,000 per acre ($150,000 in total). There was evidence that under its zoning at the time of contract, the value of the land was approximately $65,000 and that if a proposed rezoning became effective, its value would be approximately $195,000. Since the purchasers sought specific performance, and the vendor sought rectification, alternatively an order setting aside the contract of sale, the issues between the parties fell to be decided on equitable rather than common law principles. In their joint judgment, Mason ACJ, Murphy and Deane JJ accepted that it is the objective rather than the subjective theory of contract which properly determines whether a contract has been made. Therefore, a contracting party cannot rely on his or her own mistake to say that the contract was void ab initio, even if the fact in question was fundamental, and if the other party knew of the mistake. In saying this, they adopted214 dicta in the judgment of Denning LJ in Solle v Butcher.215 As they noted, Lord Denning’s judgment had been referred to with approval in earlier High Court cases concerning common mistake. They were prepared to apply it to a unilateral mistake in relation to the terms of a formal contract of sale.216 Having held that the contract was valid, Mason ACJ, Murphy and Deane JJ had to consider ‘the basis upon which relief in equity is available from the contractual consequences of unilateral mistake’.217 They accepted that the basis of equity’s jurisdiction to set aside a contract for unilateral mistake was equity’s ordinary jurisdiction to deal with any instrument or other transaction in which enforcement of a party’s legal rights would be ‘unconscientious’. In their view, where one party to a contract is under a mistake as to the terms or subject matter of the contract, ‘special circumstances’ would ordinarily need to be shown before the requisite unconscientiousness could be established.218 [page 472] Mason ACJ, Murphy and Deane JJ stated the following proposition as appropriate and adequate for disposing of the case:219 [A] party who has entered into a written contract under a serious mistake about its contents in relation
to a fundamental term will be entitled in equity to an order rescinding the contract if the other party is aware that circumstances exist which indicate that the first party is entering the contract under some serious mistake or misapprehension about either the content or subject matter of that term and deliberately sets out to ensure that the first party does not become aware of the existence of his mistake or misapprehension.
They thought that the proposition had a broad basis of support in the authorities and was ‘calculated to do justice’ between contracting parties. They added that, for present purposes, their proposition could be limited to cases where there has been no material alteration of position by the non-mistaken party and where the rights of third parties had not intervened. On the facts, the contract could be rescinded because of the nature of the vendor’s mistake and the purchasers’ unconscionable conduct in deliberately ensuring that the vendor did not become aware of her mistake.220 Since Mason ACJ, Murphy and Deane JJ ‘left to another day’ the question whether Lord Denning’s dictum applied to informal contracts such as those involved in Smith v Hughes221 and Hartog v Colin & Shields,222 their judgment does not call into question the position at common law as expounded in those cases. Moreover, Taylor v Johnson was not a mistake of identity case, and the correctness of cases such as Cundy v Lindsay223 and Ingram v Little224 is also unresolved. It might also be mentioned that although the particular species of objective contract theory225 which characterised Lord Denning’s judgments was given prominence, an integral part of the decision in Taylor v Johnson was that it was open to the vendor to give evidence of (and to rely upon) her subjective belief.
Restrictions on Rescission for Mistake [20-55] Applicability of the rules of misrepresentation. We saw in Chapter 18 that there are certain restrictions on the right of a person to [page 473] rescind a contract for misrepresentation.226 By and large the same restrictions apply to cases of rescission for mistake.227 Both judgments in Svanosio v McNamara228 noted that even if the case had otherwise been a proper one for the exercise of equitable jurisdiction, there was a
question whether restitutio in integrum was still possible. In Solle v Butcher229 the English Court of Appeal set aside an executed lease for common mistake and Denning LJ suggested that the observations of Joyce J in Seddon v North Eastern Salt Co Ltd230 that an executed contract could not be rescinded for innocent misrepresentation had lost authority since Scrutton LJ had cast doubt on them in Lever Bros Ltd v Bell.231 The High Court did not have to deal with this matter in Svanosio v McNamara but considered that at least an ordinary contract for the sale of land, once executed, cannot be rescinded either for misrepresentation or for mistake in the absence of fraud, or (in effect) a total failure of consideration. 1.
See [20-02].
2.
See [20-07], [20-08], [20-37], [21-01]–[21-11], [39-11].
3.
See generally Chapter 18 (contracts induced by misleading conduct) and further [20-08]. Similarly, the mistake may be caused by the breach of a statutory prohibition, for example, the prohibition on misleading and deceptive conduct, and statutory relief may then be available. See generally Chapter 19.
4.
See [20-06].
5.
See further [20-08], [38-03].
6.
See Daniel Friedmann, ‘The Objective Principle and Mistake and Involuntariness in Contract and Restitution’ (2003) 119 LQR 68. See further [20-13].
7.
See [20-41], [20-45].
8.
See [20-16], [20-34].
9.
(1867) LR 2 QB 580.
10.
(1867) LR 2 QB 580 at 587.
11.
See [18-37]–[18-38], [20-07], [20-08].
12.
See [20-37], [39-11].
13.
See [21-01]–[21-11].
14.
See [20-26]–[20-32], [20-36], [20-52]–[20-54].
15.
See further [20-15] and generally Chapter 38.
16.
See generally Chapter 18.
17.
In some cases a court refusing specific performance has acknowledged that the contract remains available for the purpose of common law remedies: see, eg Cochrane v Willis (1865) LR 1 Ch App 58 at 64.
18.
The high water mark is the judgment of Denning LJ in Solle v Butcher [1950] 1 KB 671 (see [2029]).
19.
See [18-06]–[18-12].
20.
See Rogers v Ingham (1876) 3 Ch D 351.
21.
See, eg Allcard v Walker [1896] 2 Ch 369; Re Roberts [1905] 1 Ch 704; Solle v Butcher [1950] 1 KB 671.
22.
Powell v Smith (1872) LR 14 Eq 85; Dowsett v Reid (1912) 15 CLR 695.
23.
Wilding v Sanderson [1897] 2 Ch 534; Easyfind (NSW) Pty Ltd v Paterson (1987) 11 NSWLR 98 at 107.
24.
See Avon County Council v Howlett [1983] 1 WLR 605 at 620.
25.
(1867) LR 2 HL 149.
26.
See [20-27].
27.
(1867) LR 2 HL 149 at 170. And see Earl of Beauchamp v Winn (1873) LR 6 HL 223; Eaglesfield v Marquis of Londonderry (1876) 4 Ch D 693 at 703 where a similar approach was taken. But note the dissenting judgment of Jenkins LJ in Solle v Butcher [1950] 1 KB 671.
28.
See [18-10], [38-01], [38-18].
29.
See also [18-10].
30.
See [33-55].
31.
(1903) 19 TLR 434. See also William Sindall Plc v Cambridgeshire County Council [1994] 1 WLR 1016 at 1039, 1040 (tests the same). Contrast Krell v Henry [1903] 2 KB 740 (see [33-18]).
32.
(1903) 19 TLR 434 at 434.
33.
See generally [20-40]–[20-48].
34.
See Chapter 18.
35.
Subject to what is said in [20-45] concerning the suggested possibility that contracts can be ‘void’ for mistake.
36.
It is assumed that there is no rescission prior to the sale to F. See [18-53].
37.
See [10-02]–[10-10].
38.
The relevant factors were considered [10-06]–[10-10].
39.
‘Ignorance’ is, however, a broader concept. See D W McLauchlan and C E F Rickett, ‘Mistake and Ignorance Under the New Zealand Contractual Mistakes Act 1977’ (1995) 8 JCL 193.
40.
See, eg McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission (1951) 84 CLR 377 (see [2017]). Contrast Cox v Prentice (1815) 3 M & S 344; 105 ER 641; Jefferys v Fairs (1876) 4 Ch D 448.
41.
Contrast a pre-contractual misrepresentation which may continue to be available as a source of rights even though incorporated as a term of the contract; see [18-57].
42.
See, eg Taylor v Johnson (1983) 151 CLR 422; 45 ALR 265 (see [20-54]). See also [1-10], [3-06], [12-03].
43.
(1951) 84 CLR 377 at 407–8.
44.
See [39-11].
45.
See, eg [20-13].
46.
See [37-29], [38-06].
47.
See [38-06] and generally Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1017, 1311, 1320.
48.
See, eg Cox v Prentice (1815) 3 M & S 344; 105 ER 641; Strickland v Turner (1852) 7 Ex 208; 155 ER 919. Contrast Clare v Lamb (1875) LR 10 CP 334.
49.
Cf Bingham v Bingham (1748) 1 Ves Sen 126; 27 ER 934; Cooper v Phibbs (1867) LR 2 HL 149 (see [20-27]).
50.
See further [20-16], [20-17].
51.
See [20-06], [20-08]. Cf Brennan v Bolt Burdon (a firm) [2005] QB 303. See also [18-23].
52.
See ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 11; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 10; NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923 s 11; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 9; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 6; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 11; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 11; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 6.
53.
(1856) 5 HLC 673; 10 ER 1065. See Louis Proksch, ‘Couturier v Hastie and the Indian Corn Trade’ (2000) 15 JCL 268. Cf Barr v Gibson (1838) 3 M & W 390; 150 ER 1196.
54.
Del credere agents are agents on sale who guarantee that the buyer will pay.
55.
Sub nom Hastie v Couturier (1853) 9 Ex 102 at 109–10; 156 ER 43 at 46–7.
56.
(1856) 5 HLC 673 at 681; 10 ER 1065 at 1069.
57.
(1951) 84 CLR 377.
58.
Webb J’s judgment in favour of the plaintiffs on the ground of deceit is also reported (1950) 84 CLR 377.
59.
(1856) 5 HLC 673; 10 ER 1065 (see [20-16]).
60.
(1951) 84 CLR 377 at 407.
61.
(1951) 84 CLR 377 at 409–10.
62.
See further [35-11].
63.
See [36-21]–[36-22].
64.
See [14-12].
65.
(1956) 96 CLR 186.
66.
(1956) 96 CLR 186 at 195.
67.
For the treatment of equitable relief see [20-30].
68.
(1956) 96 CLR 186 (see [20-18]). See also Bligh v Martin [1968] 1 All ER 1157. Compare cases in which the subject matter was found to be a ‘chance’: Cochrane v Willis (1865) LR 1 Ch App 58; Jefferys v Fairs (1876) 4 Ch D 448. And cf Re Roberts [1905] 1 Ch 704; Veitch v Sinclair [1975] 1 NZLR 264.
69.
Care must be taken in relying on English cases in this area since there is some evidence of a tendency to adopt a wider view of mistake than is tenable under Australian law. See, eg Barrow Lane & Ballard Ltd v Phillip Phillips & Co Ltd [1929] 1 KB 574 (sale of goods).
70.
(1956) 96 CLR 186 at 195–6.
71.
[1950] 1 KB 671 at 691.
72.
(1951) 84 CLR 377 (see [20-17]).
73.
See also Associated Japanese Bank (International) Ltd v Credit du Nord SA [1989] 1 WLR 255 at 268–9 and cf [33-43]–[33-48] (self-induced frustration).
74.
See, eg Gompertz v Bartlett (1853) 2 E & B 849; 118 ER 985; Gurney v Wormersley (1854) 4 E & B 133; 119 ER 51; Scott v Coulson [1903] 1 Ch 453 (affirmed [1903] 2 Ch 249).
75.
See Galloway v Galloway (1914) 30 TLR 531; Law v Harrigan (1917) 33 TLR 381. Cf Sherwood v Walker 33 NW 919 (1887) in which seller and buyer of a cow for a price of $80 both believed she was barren. In fact she was in calf. Such a breeding cow would have brought the seller from $750 to $1000. The court sustained the seller’s rescission and refusal to deliver.
76.
[1932] AC 161. See Catharine MacMillan, ‘How Temptation Led to Mistake: an Explanation of Bell
v Lever Brothers Ltd’ (2003) 119 LQR 625. 77.
Cf Robert A Munro & Co Ltd v Meyer [1930] 2 KB 312.
78.
[1932] AC 161 at 226.
79.
[1932] AC 161 at 227.
80.
[1932] AC 161 at 223–4. The bullet points have been inserted to highlight the examples given by Lord Atkin.
81.
[1932] AC 161 at 235–6.
82.
[1932] AC 161 at 236. Lord Blanesburgh stressed that a case of voidness for common mistake on which Lever Bros had succeeded in the lower courts was not open on the pleadings and considered that an amendment should not be allowed, but in any event expressed agreement with the ‘conclusions’ of Lords Atkin and Thankerton.
83.
[1903] 1 Ch 453 (affirmed [1903] 2 Ch 249). Contrast Veitch v Sinclair [1975] 1 NZLR 264.
84.
[1932] AC 161 (see [20-22]).
85.
[1932] AC 161 at 236.
86.
[1932] AC 161 (see [20-22]).
87.
See [20-26]–[20-32].
88.
(1983) 151 CLR 422 (see [20-54]).
89.
[1932] AC 161 at 217–27.
90.
(1951) 84 CLR 377 (see [20-17]).
91.
[1989] 1 WLR 255 (see G H Treitel (1988) 104 LQR 501; Geoffrey Marston [1989] CLJ 173; J W Carter (1991) 3 JCL 237). See also Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society v William H Price Ltd [1934] AC 455 (on appeal from (1933) 33 SR (NSW) 196); Nicholson and Venn v Smith Marriott (1947) 177 LT 189; William Sindall Plc v Cambridgeshire County Council [1994] 1 WLR 1016 at 1039. Contrast Upton-on-Severn RDC v Powell [1942] 1 All ER 220; Citibank NA v Brown Shipley & Co Ltd [1991] 2 All ER 690 (see A H Hudson [1991] LMCLQ 291; Andrew Phang (1992) 5 JCL 69).
92.
[1989] 1 WLR 255 at 269.
93.
Cf Pope & Pearson v The Buenos Ayres New Gas Co (1892) 8 TLR 758; Subdivisions Ltd v Payne [1934] SASR 214.
94.
[1932] AC 161 (see [20-22]).
95.
Frederick E Rose (London) Ltd v William H Pim Junior & Co Ltd [1953] 2 QB 450; Harrison & Jones Ltd v Bunten & Lancaster Ltd [1953] 1 QB 646.
96.
It would follow from this that the sale of goods legislation (see [20-16]) should be amended to provide merely that where there is a contract for the sale of specific goods which have, without the seller’s knowledge or fault, perished at the time of contract, the contract is void only if there is an express or implied term to this effect.
97.
See especially [18-37]–[18-38].
98.
(1867) LR 2 HL 149. Cf Huddersfield Banking Co Ltd v Henry Lister & Son Ltd [1895] 2 Ch 273; Allcard v Walker [1896] 2 Ch 369.
99.
The mistake was treated as one of fact, not of law.
100. See Huddersfield Banking Co Ltd v Henry Lister & Son Ltd [1895] 2 Ch 273; Hudson v Jope (1914) 14 SR (NSW) 351.
Cf Hudson v Jope (1914) 14 SR (NSW) 351; Whitelaw v Delaney [1914] AC 131; Leaf v 101. International Galleries [1950] 2 KB 86 esp at 92–3, 94. 102. Earl of Beauchamp v Winn (1873) LR 6 HL 223. 103. Hitchcock v Giddings (1817) 4 Price 135; 146 ER 418; Jones v Clifford (1876) 3 Ch D 779; Bettyes v Maynard (1882) 46 LT 766. 104. Bingham v Bingham (1748) 1 Ves Sen 126; 27 ER 934. 105. See Allen v Richardson (1879) 13 Ch D 524; Brownlie v Campbell (1880) 5 App Cas 925. 106. See [39-11]. 107. Mills v Fox (1887) 37 Ch D 153; Allcard v Walker [1896] 2 Ch 369; Robert A Munro & Co Ltd v Meyer [1930] 2 KB 312. 108. [1950] 1 KB 671. 109. Jenkins LJ dissented. 110. [1950] 1 KB 671 at 690–1. 111. [1950] 1 KB 671 at 693. 112. See, eg Magee v Pennine Insurance Co Ltd [1969] 2 QB 507; Associated Japanese Bank (International) Ltd v Credit du Nord SA [1989] 1 WLR 255 (see [20-24]); William Sindall Plc v Cambridgeshire County Council [1994] 1 WLR 1016 at 1042. 113. See Dell v Beasley [1959] NZLR 89; Waring v S J Brentnall Ltd [1975] 2 NZLR 401; Ivanochko v Sych (1967) 60 DLR (2d) 474. 114. See Clasic International Pty Ltd v Lagos (2002) 60 NSWLR 241. See also [20-54]. 115. See, eg Leaf v International Galleries [1950] 2 KB 86; Oscar Chess Ltd v Williams [1957] 1 WLR 370; Magee v Pennine Insurance Co Ltd [1969] 2 QB 507. 116. [1932] AC 161 (see [20-17]). 117. See Associated Japanese Bank (International) Ltd v Credit du Nord SA [1989] 1 WLR 255 at 266. As a further ground for his decision in that case (see [20-24]) Steyn J said the contract of guarantee could have been set aside on equitable grounds. But see John Cartwright, ‘Solle v Butcher and the Doctrine of Mistake in Contract’ (1987) 103 LQR 594. 118. [1969] 2 QB 507. 119. There is an additional difficulty, namely, that the law on compromises of disputed claims (see N H Andrews, ‘Mistaken Settlements of Disputed Claims’ [1989] LMCLQ 431 at 437–8 and generally [650]–[6-55]) proceeds on the basis that the fact that the disputed claim would have failed does not vitiate the compromise if bona fide, as seems to have been the case in Magee. See Prudential Assurance Co Ltd v C M Breedon Pty Ltd [1994] 2 VR 452. Cf Huddersfield Banking Co Ltd v Henry Lister & Son Ltd [1895] 2 Ch 273 at 282, 283, 285–6. 120. See further [20-30], [20-31]. 121. [2003] QB 679 (see F M B Reynolds, (2003) 119 LQR 177; Christopher Hare, [2003] CLJ 29). See Andrew Tettenborn, ‘Agreements, Common Mistake and the Purpose of Contract’ (2011) 27 JCL 91. 122. See [2003] QB 679 at 718–20, 725. 123. [1950] 1 KB 671. Cf Earl of Beauchamp v Winn (1873) LR 6 HL 223 at 233 (mistake affecting ‘essence’); Huddersfield Banking Co Ltd v Henry Lister & Son Ltd [1895] 2 Ch 273 at 284 (‘material’). 124. See William Sindall Plc v Cambridgeshire County Council [1994] 1 WLR 1016 (contractual
allocation of risk left no room for rescission on the ground of mistake). Cf Soper v Arnold (1887) 37 Ch D 96; Debenham v Sawbridge [1901] 2 Ch 98. 125. (1956) 96 CLR 186. See also Cousins v Freeman (1957) 58 WALR 79. 126. See [20-18]. 127. Indeed, they would have been entitled to damages for breach of warranty, although the amount of damages would have been limited by the rule in Bain v Fothergill (1874) LR 7 HL 158, as to which see [36-21]. 128. See Perrin v Reynolds (1886) 12 VLR 440. 129. (1956) 96 CLR 186 at 198. This may be the explanation for Cooper v Phibbs (1867) LR 2 HL 149 (see [20-27]); see Paul Matthews, ‘A Note on Cooper v Phibbs’ (1989) 105 LQR 599. A peculiar feature of contracts for the sale of land which reinforces this position is that a purchaser has ample opportunity to discover defects of title before completion. 130. (1978) 19 SASR 520. 131. (1956) 96 CLR 186. 132. (1956) 96 CLR 186 at 195. 133. [1950] 1 KB 671. 134. (1956) 96 CLR 186 at 196. 135. (1983) 151 CLR 422 (see [20-54]). 136. (1983) 151 CLR 422 at 431. See also Earl of Beauchamp v Winn (1873) LR 6 HL 223 at 233. 137. [1950] 1 KB 671. 138. See Clasic International Pty Ltd v Lagos (2002) 60 NSWLR 241 at 250. 139. Cf Bingham v Bingham (1748) 1 Ves Sen 126; 27 ER 934; Earl of Beauchamp v Winn (1873) LR 6 HL 223. 140. [1975] 2 NZLR 401. Cf Huddersfield Banking Co Ltd v Henry Lister & Son Ltd [1895] 2 Ch 273 at 277. 141. Cf Earl of Beauchamp v Winn (1873) LR 6 HL 223 at 234 (‘wilful ignorance or culpable neglect’). But this does not imply that there must be a breach of some duty of care. 142. (1864) 2 H & C 906; 159 ER 375. 143. For a case similar to Raffles v Wichelhaus and with the same result, see Smidt v Tiden (1874) LR 9 QB 446. 144. See [3-06]. 145. See Sharp v Thomson (1915) 20 CLR 137 at 142; R W Cameron & Co v L Slutzkin Pty Ltd (1923) 32 CLR 81 at 90, 93; Life Insurance Co of Australia Ltd v Phillips (1925) 36 CLR 60 at 79–80. 146. [1913] 3 KB 564. 147. See Falck v Williams [1900] AC 176. Cf Henkel v Pape (1870) LR 6 Ex 7. 148. See [20-34]. 149. See Life Insurance Co of Australia Ltd v Phillips (1925) 36 CLR 60 at 80. 150. (1910) 10 CLR 674. 151. See [20-39], [20-54]. 152. See [20-33]–[20-35].
153. Cf Goldsbrough Mort & Co Ltd v Quinn (1910) 10 CLR 674 at 683, 688–9, 695. 154. (1861) 29 Beav 430; 54 ER 694. 155. (1861) 29 Beav 430 at 433–4; 54 ER 694 at 695. 156. See also [20-35]. 157. See Esther Stern, ‘Objectivity, Legal Doctrine and the Law of Mistaken Identity’ (1995) 8 JCL 154, esp at 168ff; Christopher Hare, ‘Identity Mistakes: A Missed Opportunity?’ (2004) 67 MLR 993. 158. (1857) 2 H & N 564; 157 ER 232. See also Hardman v Booth (1863) 1 H & C 803; 158 ER 1107. 159. On whether a claim in restitution should have succeeded see Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 1038. 160. (1857) 2 H & N 564 at 565–6; 157 ER 232 at 233. Martin B concurred. 161. (1857) 2 H & N 564 at 566; 157 ER 232 at 233. 162. The case would certainly have been different if the defendants had retained and consumed the goods after receiving the plaintiff’s invoice. This might have been construed as an acceptance of a counteroffer by the plaintiff to sell to them. 163. (1878) 3 App Cas 459. See also Re International Society of Auctioneers and Valuers (Baillie’s Case) [1898] 1 Ch 110. 164. (1878) 3 App Cas 459 at 465. 165. (1878) 3 App Cas 459. 166. Contrast cases where there is an aversion to contracting with a particular party, eg Archer v Stone (1898) 78 LT 34; Said v Butt [1920] 3 KB 497; Dyster v Randall & Sons [1926] 1 Ch 932; Williams v Bulat [1992] 2 Qd R 566 (see Amanda Milin (1994) 7 JCL 76). 167. Cf Higgons v Burton (1857) 26 LJ Ex 342; Roache v Australian Mercantile Land & Finance Co Ltd (1964) 64 SR (NSW) 307. And see Lake v Simmons [1927] AC 487. 168. (1897) 14 TLR 98. 169. (1878) 3 App Cas 459 (see [20-41]). 170. But see the approach taken in s 8 of New Zealand’s Contractual Mistakes Act 1977, which prevents any order under the Act from affecting innocent third party purchasers for value or their successors in title. 171. [1927] AC 487. 172. Viscount Haldane quoted from the French jurist Pothier ([1927] AC 487 at 501) and application of the civil law principle led to a strange result in Sowler v Potter [1940] 1 KB 271. See also Dennant v Skinner [1948] 2 KB 164, where the sale was by auction. 173. [1961] 1 QB 31. 174. [1919] 2 KB 243. See also Fawcett v Star Car Sales Ltd [1960] NZLR 406. 175. In Lake v Simmons [1927] AC 487 Viscount Haldane distinguished Phillips v Brooks Ltd as a case in which the jeweller intended to deal with the person whom he identified by sight and hearing in his shop, the rogue’s misrepresentation being only as to payment and merely rendering voidable the right to delivery in advance of payment. 176. [1972] 1 QB 198. 177. Contrast Car and Universal Finance Co Ltd v Caldwell [1965] 1 QB 525 (see [1840], [18-53]). 178. [1972] 1 QB 198 at 207. See also Papas v Bianca Investments Pty Ltd (2002) 82 SASR 581 at 584–6.
179. (1897) 14 TLR 98. 180. [1919] 2 KB 243. 181. (1878) 3 App Cas 459. 182. [2004] 1 AC 919. See D W McLauchlan, ‘Mistake of Identity and Contract Formation’ (2005) 21 JCL 1. 183. See further on the case [20-48]. 184. (1964) 111 CLR 177. 185. Presumably in the light of the then recent English Court of Appeal decision in Ingram v Little [1961] 1 QB 31. 186. [1919] 2 KB 243. 187. (1964) 111 CLR 177 at 200. 188. [1961] 1 QB 31 (see [20-45]). 189. [1972] 1 QB 198 (see [20-46]). 190. See, eg Papas v Bianca Investments Pty Ltd (2002) 82 SASR 581 at 584–5 (mistake as to identity and creditworthiness did not render sale of goods void for mistake). 191. [1961] 1 QB 31 (see [20-45]). 192. [1972] 1 QB 198 at 207 (see [20-46]). See also his deprecation (at 206) of reliance on principles of the civil law (but cf Smith v Wheatcroft (1878) 9 Ch D 223 at 230). 193. (1897) 14 TLR 98 (see [20-43]). 194. See [20-54]. 195. [2004] 1 AC 919 (see [20-46]). 196. See generally [12-05]–[12-23]. 197. See [2004] 1 AC 919 at 943–4, 973. 198. Subject, as always, to the impact of statutory prohibitions discussed in Chapter 19. 199. (1871) LR 6 QB 597. See also London Holeproof Hosiery Co v Padmore (1928) 44 TLR 499. 200. (1983) 151 CLR 422 (see [20-22], [20-31], [20-54]). 201. (1871) LR 6 QB 597 at 605. 202. (1871) LR 6 QB 597 at 606. 203. (1871) LR 6 QB 597 at 608. 204. (1871) LR 6 QB 597 at 611. 205. See (1871) LR 6 QB 597 at 607 (see [1-10]). 206. The expression ‘snapped at an offer’ comes from James LJ in Tamplin v James (1880) 15 Ch D 215 at 221. 207. [1939] 3 All ER 566. 208. [1939] 3 All ER 566 at 568. 209. It is, moreover, not easy to reconcile these cases with Taylor v Johnson (1983) 151 CLR 422 (see [2054]). 210. See [39-11]. In some cases where the mistake goes to the defendant’s ability to perform the contract according to its terms, the court has ordered performance to the extent possible. See Burrows v
Scammell (1881) 19 Ch D 175; Preston v Luck (1884) 27 Ch D 497. 211. See Torrance v Bolton (1872) 8 Ch App 118; Australia Hotel Co Ltd v Moore (1899) 20 LR (NSW) Eq 155; Riverlate Properties Ltd v Paul [1975] Ch 133; Trans Realties Pty Ltd v Grbac [1975] 1 NSWLR 170. But cf Hickman v Berens [1895] 2 Ch 638. 212. See [21-11]. 213. (1983) 151 CLR 422. 214. (1983) 151 CLR 422 at 429. 215. [1950] 1 KB 671 at 691 (see [20-18]). 216. (1983) 151 CLR 422 at 430. It would seem to follow that where a written offer is snapped up (see [20-51]) the contract is not void. 217. (1983) 151 CLR 422 at 431. 218. Cf Logwon Pty Ltd v Warringah Shire Council (1993) 33 NSWLR 13 at 32. 219. (1983) 151 CLR 422 at 432. In his dissenting judgment, Dawson J referred (at 444) to ‘fraud, misrepresentation or, perhaps, sharp practice, falling short of actual fraud’ as a sufficient basis for rescission, but thought that this was not established by the trial judge’s findings. 220. Dawson J, who dissented, would have held that the finding of the trial judge (Powell J) that the purchaser’s belief at the time of contracting was that the vendor intended to sell for a total price of $15,000, should have been accepted by the New South Wales Court of Appeal, with the consequential making of an order for specific performance. 221. (1871) LR 6 QB 597 (see [20-50]). 222. [1939] 3 All ER 566 (see [20-51]). 223. (1878) 3 App Cas 459 (see [20-41]). 224. [1961] 1 QB 31 (see [20-45]). 225. See [1-12] (‘fly on the wall’ theory). 226. See generally [18-42]–[18-62]. 227. As to partial rescission (see [18-45]) see Tutt v Doyle (1997) 42 NSWLR 10 at 12–13. 228. (1956) 96 CLR 186 (see [20-18]). 229. [1950] 1 KB 671. 230. [1905] 1 Ch 326 (see [18-54]). 231. [1931] 1 KB 557 at 588.
[page 474]
Chapter 21
Documents Mistakenly Signed [21-01] General. This chapter is concerned with mistakes in relation to documents. The concept of rectification applies to documents which do not accurately reflect the intention of the parties. Non est factum (‘it is not my deed’) applies to documents which are mistakenly signed in the sense that one of the parties believed the document to have an effect completely different from that which it actually has. Assume that A contracts to sell land to B and that due to an oversight by the parties the instrument of conveyance which they execute to give effect to the contract erroneously contains or omits some words or figures with the result that it does not accord with the contract. On the application of one party rectification of the instrument will be ordered, notwithstanding opposition from the party benefited by the error. This example shows that rectification is not concerned solely with contracts: the remedy is concerned with documents, not contracts. Of course, our concern is with contract documents and contract related instruments. Rectification is retrospective in effect. Therefore, the instrument is to be read as if originally executed in its rectified form.1 The general principle,2 of course, is that a person of full age and understanding who signs a document which it is apparent is intended to have legal consequences will be bound by its terms. That is so whether or not he or she has read the document or is relying on another for his or her understanding of the document. However, in certain limited circumstances a person who signs under a mistake as to the nature or effect of the document may raise the defence of non est factum. If successful, the effect is that the document is void.
Rectification [21-02] Concept and dangers associated with rectification. Rectification
refers to mistakes in instruments and is an order that an instrument be ‘rectified’ or ‘reformed’ so that the mistake in it will be eliminated.3 Rectification is available to reform the parties’ document, and [page 475] not to reform the parties’ bargain.4 It is an equitable remedy which has, until quite recently, been associated exclusively with cases of common mistake. Certainly mistake by one party, without more, will not be a ground for rectification: some implication of the unmistaken party is necessary. On this basis, however, the remedy now extends to some cases of unilateral mistake.5 Resort to rectification is generally unnecessary in relation to clerical errors apparent on the face of a document. Such problems are solved by construction.6 If rectification were available only where there was a legally enforceable contract antecedent to the defective instrument, the jurisdiction would be a limited one. On the other hand, there are dangers in ordering rectification too readily. First, it seems reasonable that the court should not give one party legally enforceable rights against the other which the former did not previously have. Second, often an instrument sought to be rectified will not merely be a formal expression or outworking of legal rights which have themselves been deliberately and carefully reduced to writing (as in the contract-conveyance illustration above), but will mark, for the first time, the reaching of agreement itself. In these circumstances it can reasonably be contended that apart from the instrument there is no enforceable agreement and so no standard against which it can be determined whether the instrument is erroneous. [21-03] Bars to rectification. Rectification and specific performance of a contract as rectified may be sought in the one proceeding.7 And an order for rectification can justify a prior discharge of the contract for breach of the contractual terms as rectified.8 The usual discretionary bars to equitable remedies such as laches are available in respect of rectification. Other bars to rectification are: acquisition of rights for value by an innocent third party under the contract in its original form;9 and
that the contract is no longer capable of being performed.10 [page 476] Apparently, it is no bar that the party seeking rectification had sought to enforce the contract in its original form.11
Nature of Agreement Relied Upon and Relevant Intention [21-04] Continuing common intention sufficient. It used to be said that there must have been a concluded and binding contract antecedent to execution of the instrument sought to be rectified.12 It is understandable that the courts have referred to the heavy onus on a plaintiff seeking rectification, but the law is not now so stringent. First, if the prior agreement is a contract, it need not be enforceable as such. For example, in United States v Motor Trucks Ltd13 the Privy Council ordered rectification of a deed from a schedule to which certain lands and buildings were omitted, notwithstanding that the agreement was unenforceable insofar as it related to those lands for lack of a written memorandum satisfying the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp). Second, it is now established that there need be no prior agreement, so long as there is a continuing common intention. Shipley UDC v Bradford Corp14 concerned an alleged contract between two bodies corporate which could not make a contract of the type in question except under seal, yet Clauson J ordered rectification.15 He was followed in Crane v Hegeman-Harris Co Inc16 by Simonds J who observed that the opposing view would produce the strange result that the parties would be bound to an instrument by a mistake to which they had equally contributed. In Slee v Warke17 the High Court adopted his view that rectification can be ordered of an instrument which does not give effect in some respect to ‘the concurrent intention of the parties existing at the date of its execution’,18 even though a previously existing binding contract cannot be proved. The test of ‘common intention continuing down to execution of the contract’ has been adopted by the High Court.19
[21-05] Intention that instrument express whole agreement. Assume that the parties have agreed on points 1 to 9, and that the instrument contains only points 1 to 7. In order to obtain rectification the plaintiff [page 477] must show that the parties intended by the instrument to give effect to points 8 and 9 of the antecedent agreement in respect of which rectification is sought.20 There may, in fact, be a number of objections to a conclusion that the instrument should be rectified to include those points. It may not have been intended that points 8 and 9 be legally binding at all. It may have been intended that they be legally binding but not by reason of being included in the instrument in question. [21-06] Intention must be as to content of instrument. The common intention which must be proved is usually expressed in terms requiring that the instrument take a certain form, as distinct from a common understanding that it would have a certain effect. In Pukallus v Cameron21 a contract for the sale of land described the land as ‘subdivision 1 of Portion 1154’. The parties believed that an area of some 27 acres containing a bore and cultivation lay within the land so described, but in truth it lay within the remainder of Portion 1154 which was being retained by the vendor. The contract was completed by conveyance and the purchasers took possession of the disputed area. The truth was not discovered until some 20 months later when a survey was carried out. The High Court held that the purchasers had not established a common intention that the instrument should provide for anything other than a sale of subdivision 1 of Portion 1154. There was no evidence of an intention to contract for the sale of the bore and cultivated area. Rather, the intention was to contract for the sale of subdivision 1 of Portion 1154 which the parties erroneously believed included the bore and cultivated area. The high water mark of the thesis that the relevant intention is that the instrument take a certain form, rather than achieve a certain effect or result is Frederick E Rose (London) Ltd v William H Pim Junior & Co Ltd.22 The parties made an oral agreement for the sale of ‘horsebeans’, and the subsequent written contract used the same word. The parties mistakenly believed that ‘horsebeans’ were ‘feveroles’. This was a fundamental mistake as to the nature of the subject matter of the contract, yet the court declined to rectify the contract, by making it refer to ‘horsebeans of the feverole type’, because the written contract did not
depart at all from the oral agreement. Denning LJ said that rectification is ‘concerned with contracts and documents, not with intentions. In order to get rectification it is necessary to show that the parties were in complete agreement on the terms of their contract, but by an error wrote them down wrongly’.23 Although these cases, particularly Rose v Pim, show that ‘common intention as to what an instrument shall say’ is not to be equated with ‘common belief or understanding as to what effect an instrument shall produce’, the more recent cases indicate that rectification may sometimes be ordered where the relevant mistake is as to the legal effect of the agreed terms, rather than their expression.24 Thus, in Winks v W H Heck & Sons [page 478] Pty Ltd25 the parties to a contract for the sale of land intended that the purchaser’s ownership should be subject to the rights of a third party to whom the vendor had sold timber growing on the land. The contract contained a term acknowledging that the purchaser was aware of the third party’s interest. The parties believed that this was effective to preserve the third party’s rights. In law it did not have this effect. The person who drafted the contract did not give effect to the common intention of the parties and rectification was ordered, even though (as was conceded) the parties’ mistake was as to the (legal) meaning of the words used.26 The position would have been different if the document had been adopted as superseding or overriding their original intention.27 More recently, in Commissioner of Stamp Duties (NSW) v Carlenka Pty Ltd28 the New South Wales Court of Appeal held that where it was intended that an amendment to a deed should achieve a particular legal effect, but the instrument by inadvertence achieved an unintended result, the fact that there was an intention to execute the deed as drafted did not prevent rectification being ordered.
Proof of Intention [21-07] Standard of proof. The courts have often emphasised that the plaintiff’s onus of proving that an instrument assented to which differs from the form which, according to the parties’ common intention, it was meant to take, is a heavy one. Various expressions have been used in the cases, including:29
‘irrefragable’; ‘beyond all reasonable doubt’; ‘convincing proof’; ‘very strong proof’; and ‘clear proof’. [page 479] However, it is a ‘question of fact and degree what weight of evidence is needed to overcome the inherent probability that the parties meant what they wrote and to establish that contrary to it the parties did not mean what they wrote’.30 For example, rectification will be more readily ordered if it was the duty of the defendant rather than the plaintiff to draw up the instrument.31 [21-08] External manifestation of intention not required. In several cases the courts have said that there must have been some ‘manifestation or disclosure by words or conduct’ or ‘outward expression’ of the accord which the subsequent instrument fails to express.32 But the view that, as a matter of law, the parties’ common intention must have been outwardly manifested has been challenged.33 In view of the clear and convincing evidence which a plaintiff seeking rectification must adduce,34 lack of any outward manifestation of the required common intention may well signify that the party seeking rectification will not be able to discharge the onus of proof. Although in most cases it is difficult to see how a plaintiff can succeed without evidence of a manifested common intention, there are distinctions between what must be proven, how proof is adduced and how convincingly the common intention must be proved. The existence of an antecedent contract is no longer required.35 It is suggested that the law does not require an outward manifestation of accord, and that it suffices that the plaintiff proves, even out of the mouths of the witnesses at the hearing, that both parties had the necessary common intention.36
Rectification for Unilateral Mistake37 [21-09] Knowledge of the mistake. In A Roberts & Co Ltd v Leicestershire County Council,38 rectification was granted where a construction company
[page 480] tendered to perform construction work for a council specifying a certain period of completion in its tender and the council’s officers inserted a different period in the formal contract which they caused to be prepared. The formal contract was submitted to the company for execution and its attention was not drawn to the time for completion specified in the contract. The company unwittingly executed it. The tender price would have been higher if it had been based on the period specified in the contract. The council’s officers knew that the company mistakenly believed that the period specified in the tender had been repeated in the contract. Although the case was not one of common mistake, Pennycuick J ordered rectification, on the basis that where one contracting party knows that an instrument contains a mistake in its favour but does nothing to correct it, the party with knowledge will be precluded from resisting rectification on the ground that the mistake was unilateral and not common. [21-10] Equitable fraud. The relevant criterion here, as in other areas of mistake where equitable relief is sought,39 is ‘equitable fraud’. Equity has a well established jurisdiction to order rectification in cases where the non-mistaken party is guilty of unconscionable conduct.40 In Riverlate Properties Ltd v Paul,41 in which a lease did not express what the lessor had intended it to express, the case was treated as one of a lessor’s unilateral mistake not known to or in any way attributable to anything said or done by the other party. The English Court of Appeal held that the lessor was not entitled to rectification or rescission. Russell LJ (for the court) emphasised that: defendant did not share the plaintiff’s mistake; defendant did not know that the document did not give effect to the plaintiff’s intention; and plaintiff’s mistake was not attributable to the defendant. Russell LJ said:42 If reference be made to principles of equity, it operates on conscience. If conscience is clear at the time of the transaction, why should equity disrupt the transaction? If a man may be said to have been fortunate in obtaining a property at a bargain price, or on terms that make it a good bargain, because the other party unknown to him has made a miscalculation or other mistake, some high-minded men might consider it appropriate that he should agree to a fresh bargain to cure the miscalculation or mistake, abandoning his good fortune. But if equity were to enforce the views of those high-minded men, we have no doubt that it would run counter to the attitudes of much the greater part of ordinary
mankind (not least the world of commerce), and would be venturing upon the field of moral philosophy in which it would soon be in difficulties.
[page 481] The court expressed the view that before rectification will be ordered in a case of unilateral mistake, the evidence must show that the non-mistaken party was involved in ‘a degree of sharp practice’.43 In Australia, the Full Court of the Victorian Supreme Court has accepted that the law on rectification for unilateral mistake is correctly stated in the Riverlate case.44 However, whether actual knowledge is required and whether the mistake must operate to the benefit of the unmistaken party, or merely prejudice the mistaken party are unclear.45 [21-11] Option of rescission or rectification. Assume that A contracts to sell land to B, and that due to inadvertence the description of the land includes more land than A intended to include. Should B be given the option of submitting to rescission of the contract ab initio or to rectification of the description to make it accord with what A intended? There have been cases in which courts have made such orders for rescission or rectification at the ‘option’ or ‘election’ of the unmistaken party.46 These cases have been criticised.47 In Riverlate Properties Ltd v Paul48 Russell LJ (for the court) raised the following question:49 What is there in principle, or in authority binding upon this court, which requires a person who has acquired a leasehold interest on terms upon which he intended to obtain it, and who thought when he obtained it that the lessor intended him to obtain it on those terms, either to lose the leasehold interest, or, if he wished to keep it, to submit to keep it only on the terms which the lessor meant to impose but did not?
What should be emphasised is that normally unilateral mistake will not be a basis for judicial intervention, and in particular, that mere unilateral mistake as to the effect of words agreed to has been rejected as a basis for rectification.50 It seems clear that rescission is not now awarded for unilateral mistake unless the unmistaken party knows or has reason to suspect that the other party is mistaken or has contributed to the mistake.
Non Est Factum [21-12] Introduction. The Latin expression non est factum (‘it is not my deed’) signifies a defence or ‘plea’ by a person who seeks to disown a deed or other document which it is alleged he or she sealed or signed. The plea is available
where the defendant did not sign at all. It is also available in a limited range of circumstances where the document was signed. When the [page 482] plea is established, the contract in which the document is expressed is void.51 The plea served a useful purpose at a time when most people could not read, and had to rely on others to explain documents to them. The proportion of the community that is illiterate has decreased and the importance of the plea has therefore diminished. The law has, in general, developed in the context of a contest between the rights of a signer who has been misled as to what the signer was signing and those of an innocent third party who has acted in reliance on the signature. [21-13] Non est factum and mental incapacity. A plea that a deed is voidable for mental incapacity52 is incompatible with the plea of non est factum. The former admits signature but denies capacity to understand, whereas the latter denies signature.53 Mental incapacity could, however, support a plea of non est factum if it went not merely to the victim’s capacity to judge, assess and evaluate, but also to the capacity to understand what was being signed so that the mind of the person signing did not go with the signature.54 [21-14] History. The plea has experienced a rise and fall. Its rise took place in the 19th century when it became available to persons other than illiterates, and also in respect of documents other than deeds. Its fall has occurred as the courts have shown reluctance to allow persons — neither blind nor illiterate — to disown documents which they have foolishly signed without reading. Since, typically, non est factum is pleaded by the signer as against an unsuspecting third party who acted in reliance on the signature, the cases resemble the mistaken identity cases in which an imposter tricks the victim into handing over property then disposes of it for value to an innocent third party. Both raise the question: which of two innocent parties is to suffer from the fraudulent act of a third? Thoroughgood’s Case55 is a good illustration of the early operation of the plea. The illiterate Thoroughgood executed what John Ward told him was a release of arrears of rental in favour of William Chicken. It was in truth a release of Thoroughgood’s entire estate and interest in the land to Chicken. The Court of Common Pleas held that a deed executed by an illiterate was not binding if it had
been falsely explained, whether by the grantee or by a stranger to the deed. What was overlooked in later cases is the dictum that if even a blind or illiterate person signs without desiring the deed to be read at all, it is binding. The plea was given its most liberal scope in Carlisle and Cumberland Banking Co v Bragg.56 Bragg signed, without reading, a banker’s continuing [page 483] guarantee in respect of the account of one Rigg. Rigg had fraudulently represented to Bragg that the document was an insurance paper which Bragg had signed the previous day and which had got wet and blurred in the rain and needed to be re-signed. The English Court of Appeal held that the jury’s finding of ‘negligence’ on Bragg’s part was immaterial since it was only in respect of negotiable instruments that a signer owed such a duty of care to others as might form the basis of ‘negligence’ which would estop Bragg. The judgments suggested that the only relevant consideration is the nature and extent of the mistake actually made. This would make innocent third parties’ rights dependent exclusively upon the subjective state of mind of the signer, an improbable position for the common law to take. The case was overruled in Saunders v Anglia Building Society,57 where the House of Lords restated the principles governing the availability of non est factum, in a manner favouring the innocent third party as against the signer. [21-15] Saunders v Anglia Building Society. In Saunders v Anglia Building Society58 the plaintiff, 78-year-old Mrs Gallie, executed what proved to be an assignment, expressed to be for consideration, of her leasehold interest in her home to the first defendant, Lee. Her intention had been to execute a deed of gift of that interest to her nephew, Parkin, knowing that he intended, with his business associate Lee, to raise money on the security of the property. They both attended upon her to have her sign the document. At the time her spectacles were broken. She could not read without them and so did not read the document. Lee mortgaged the property for £2000 to a building society which acted in reliance on Mrs Gallie’s signature on the deed of assignment. She sought a declaration that the deed of assignment was void not only as against Lee but also as against the building society. Mrs Gallie succeeded before the trial judge. The building society appealed and in the English Court of Appeal59 the majority held that the plea failed because
the mistake related not to the essential character of the document but merely to its contents. Lord Denning MR also held that the plea failed, but on a different basis. He exposed unsatisfactory aspects of the character-contents distinction and simply applied the rule that a person who does not take the trouble to read a legal document must accept the consequences which flow from an innocent third party’s reliance on the document, for example, in advancing money on the faith of the document. The House of Lords agreed that the plea must be closely confined and can only rarely be sustained by a person of full capacity.60 Lord Reid suggested that the plea is available to ‘those who are permanently or temporarily unable through no fault of their own to have without explanation any real understanding of the purport of a particular document, whether that be from defective education, illness or innate [page 484] incapacity’61 and perhaps, where the document has been misrepresented as not affecting the signer’s legal rights, even to a person of full capacity.62 [21-16] Proof of non est factum. In Saunders v Anglia Building Society63 the House of Lords said that the plea of non est factum requires clear and positive evidence before it can be established. It was also held that the onus of proof lies on the party who seeks to disown the signature. It was also accepted that three requirements, explained below,64 are relevant to the plea: (1) that the signer is under a disability; (2) that there is a sufficient difference between the document as it is and as the signer believed it to be; and (3) in cases where the rights of an innocent third party have intervened, that the signer should not have been careless. [21-17] Necessary difference and relevant disability. The nature and extent of the necessary difference between what the signed document is and what it was believed by the signer to be were redefined in Saunders v Anglia Building Society.65 The character-contents formulation was thought unsatisfactory and a number of their Lordships proposed that the difference must be ‘radical or
fundamental’. The High Court in Petelin v Cullen66 has since used the expression ‘radically different’. In Petelin v Cullen the High Court formulated what was decided in Saunders in the following terms:67 The class of persons who can avail themselves of the defence is limited. It is available to those who are unable to read owing to blindness or illiteracy and who must rely on others for advice as to what they are signing; it is also available to those who through no fault of their own are unable to have any understanding of the purport of a particular document. To make out the defence a defendant must show that he signed the document in the belief that it was radically different from what it was in fact and that, at least as against innocent persons, his failure to read and understand it was not due to carelessness on his part. Finally, it is accepted that there is a heavy onus on a defendant who seeks to establish the defence.
It has been suggested that where the actual and supposed documents are both legal documents dealing with the same property or rights, the difference (which will be between actual and supposed effect) will not suffice.68 It would be open to a court to hold that such a difference is not [page 485] ‘radical’ or ‘fundamental’. Thus, in O’Brien v Australia and New Zealand Bank Ltd69 Zelling J held that the difference between a guarantee of any future indebtedness and a guarantee and indemnity as to both existing and future indebtedness was not sufficiently ‘fundamental’ to sustain a plea of non est factum. [21-18] Carelessness in signing. The importance of carelessness seems to have been most obvious in relation to cheques and other negotiable instruments because of their wide circulation, and the commercial necessity that signatures on them be trustworthy. Yet ex hypothesi the signer did not know that the instrument was a negotiable instrument and so it is not rational to look for the exercise of special and additional care towards others just because the document being signed turns out to be a negotiable instrument. In the earliest of the reported negotiable instrument cases, Foster v Mackinnon,70 the defendant was induced to endorse a bill of exchange by a fraudulent misrepresentation that the document was a guarantee. He was subsequently sued by a bona fide holder for value. The jury was directed that the plea of non est factum would be made out, and the defendant entitled to a verdict, if he: (1) signed as a result of that fraudulent misrepresentation;
(2) believed that the instrument was not a bill but was a guarantee; and (3) was not guilty of ‘negligence’. The Court of Common Pleas upheld this direction, although Byles J (for the court) considered that when applied to negotiable instruments the plea must be closely confined in order to protect innocent transferees for value. In Hunter v Walters71 Sir George Mellish LJ said:72 When a man knows that he is conveying or doing something with his estate but does not ask what is the precise effect of the deed, because he is told it is a mere form, and has such confidence in his solicitor as to execute the deed in ignorance, then, in my opinion, a deed so executed, although it may be voidable upon the ground of fraud, it is not a void deed … [T]he parties who signed the receipt are guilty of such negligence that they ought to be postponed in equity to Mr Curling, who had a perfectly equitable title without any notice, and who advanced his money on the faith of the representation contained in that instrument.
In Saunders v Anglia Building Society73 it was held that the carelessness or ‘negligence’ referred to in this context is not based on a specific duty of care owed to individuals of the kind which founds an action in tort, and that the defeat of the plea by the signer’s carelessness is not truly an instance of estoppel by negligence but of the principle that persons may not take advantage of their own wrong. Foster v Mackinnon74 was approved in this [page 486] respect.75 Some of the earlier cases dealing with the issues of the negligence of the signer76 are now doubtful in the light of this more expansive concept. There are also cases,77 which although correct in their findings of ‘negligence’ would be reasoned along different lines. [21-19] Absence of innocent third party. Where no innocent third party is involved, and the binding effect of a signature is in issue only as between the signer and the other party to the document, considerations different from those discussed above apply. In particular, the issue of negligence does not arise.78 The signing will be merely one factor, albeit a most important and persuasive factor, on which the objective theory of contract will operate. But factors at work as between the parties may displace the theory. For example, the other party may have misrepresented the nature of the document to the signer. Alternatively, that party may have known that the signer intended to sign a document of a fundamentally or radically different nature from that signed in fact.79 Such cases
are dealt with under the rubric of unilateral mistake as to the terms of the offer or promise.80 [21-20] Filling in blanks. Where a person signs a document containing blanks, intending that they be filled in by someone else, the mere fact that the latter fills them in in an unauthorised and improper manner will not render the document void.81 However, the document may be rectified if by an honest mistake incorrect material is inserted.82 1.
Malmesbury (Earl) v Malmesbury (Countess) (1862) 31 Beav 407 at 418; 54 ER 1196 at 1200; Issa v Berisha [1981] 1 NSWLR 261.
2.
Gallie v Lee [1969] 2 Ch 17 at 36–7 (affirmed sub nom Saunders v Anglia Building Society [1971] AC 1004).
3.
See generally Marcus Smith, ‘Rectification of Contracts for Common Mistake, Joscelyne v Nissen, and Subjective States of Mind’ (2007) 123 LQR 116; David McLauchlan, ‘Interpretation and Rectification: Lord Hoffmann’s Last Stand’ [2009] NZ L Rev 431; Richard Buxton, ‘“Construction” and Rectification after Chartbrook’ [2010] CLJ 253.
4.
See, eg Ryledar Pty Ltd v Euphoric Pty Ltd (2007) 69 NSWLR 603 at 629; [2007] NSWCA 65 at [122].
5.
See [21-09]–[21-11].
6.
For a broader view of the role of construction see Chartbrook Ltd v Persimmon Homes Ltd [2009] 1 AC 1101; [2009] UKHL 38.
7.
Craddock Bros v Hunt [1922] 2 Ch 809; [1923] 2 Ch 136; United States v Motor Trucks Ltd [1924] AC 196.
8.
Tydhof v Miethke (1982), unreported, SC (Qld) (Connolly J), 3 June.
9.
Smith v Jones [1954] 2 All ER 823; J J Leonard Properties Pty Ltd v Leonard (WA) Pty Ltd (No 2) (1987) 13 ACLR 77.
10.
Borrowman v Rossel (1864) 16 CB (NS) 58; 143 ER 1045.
11.
Market Terminal Pty Ltd v Dominion Insurance Co of Australia [1982] 1 NSWLR 105.
12.
See Mackenzie v Coulson (1869) LR 8 Eq 368 at 375; United States v Motor Trucks Ltd [1924] AC 196 at 200; Australian Gypsum Ltd v Hume Steel Ltd (1930) 45 CLR 54 at 63, 64.
13.
[1924] AC 196.
14.
[1936] Ch 375.
15.
Cf Issa v Berisha [1981] 1 NSWLR 261 (contract void for uncertainty).
16.
[1939] 1 All ER 662 at 664 (affirmed [1939] 4 All ER 68).
17.
(1949) 86 CLR 271.
18.
(1949) 86 CLR 271 at 280.
19.
See Hooker Town Developments Pty Ltd v Director of War Service Homes (1973) 47 ALJR 320 at 323–4; Maralinga Pty Ltd v Major Enterprises Pty Ltd (1973) 128 CLR 336 at 350; 1 ALR 169; Pukallus v Cameron (1982) 180 CLR 447 at 452, 456; 43 ALR 243. See also Australasian Performing Right Association Ltd v Austarama Television Pty Ltd [1972] 2 NSWLR 467 at 472–5.
20.
Maralinga Pty Ltd v Major Enterprises Pty Ltd (1973) 128 CLR 336. See also RACV Investment Co
Pty Ltd v Silbury Pty Ltd (1986) 13 ACLR 555 at 558–9. 21.
(1982) 180 CLR 447.
22.
[1953] 2 QB 450.
23.
[1953] 2 QB 450 at 461. See also Chartbrook Ltd v Persimmon Homes Ltd [2009] 1 AC 1101 at 1126; [2009] UKHL 38 at [60].
24.
The requirements for rectification may be more difficult to satisfy in such a case. See Bush v National Australia Bank Ltd (1992) 35 NSWLR 390 at 406–8 per Hodgson J (expressing the view that rectification will not be refused merely because the mistake is as to legal effect). See also The Club Cape Schanck Resort Co Ltd v Cape Country Club Pty Ltd (2001) 3 VR 526 at 539, 540.
25.
[1986] 1 Qd R 226. See also NSW Medical Defence Union Ltd v Transport Industries Insurance Co Ltd (1986) 6 NSWLR 740. Contrast Ryledar Pty Ltd v Euphoric Pty Ltd (2007) 69 NSWLR 603 at 639; [2007] NSWCA 65 at [164] (clear and convincing proof not present).
26.
But cf Bacchus Marsh Concentrated Milk Co Ltd v Joseph Nathan & Co Ltd (1919) 26 CLR 410 at 451 (dictum questioning such an approach).
27.
See Maralinga Pty Ltd v Major Enterprises Pty Ltd (1973) 128 CLR 336.
28.
(1995) 41 NSWLR 329 at 332, 335, 344. See also The Club Cape Schanck Resort Co Ltd v Cape Country Club Pty Ltd (2001) 3 VR 526 at 530, 541.
29.
See, eg Australian Gypsum Ltd v Hume Steel Ltd (1930) 45 CLR 54 at 64; Slee v Warke (1949) 86 CLR 271 at 281; Maralinga Pty Ltd v Major Enterprises Pty Ltd (1973) 128 CLR 336 at 349; Bishopsgate Insurance Australia Ltd v Commonwealth Engineering (NSW) Pty Ltd [1981] 1 NSWLR 429 at 431; Pukallus v Cameron (1982) 180 CLR 447 at 452, 456. See also Restatement (2d) Contracts (1979), § 155, com c (‘clear and convincing evidence’).
30.
Earl v Hector Whaling Ltd [1961] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 459 at 468 per Pearce LJ.
31.
Moses v Northern Assurances Co (1856) 1 VLT 114.
32.
See Frederick E Rose (London) Ltd v William H Pim Junior & Co Ltd [1953] 2 QB 450 at 461, 462; Re Streamline Fashions Pty Ltd [1965] VR 418; Australasian Performing Right Association Ltd v Austarama Television Pty Ltd [1972] 2 NSWLR 467 at 473; Hooker Town Developments Pty Ltd v Director of War Service Homes (1973) 47 ALJR 320 at 323–4; Maralinga Pty Ltd v Major Enterprises Pty Ltd (1973) 128 CLR 336 at 349–50.
33.
See Pukallus v Cameron (1982) 180 CLR 447 at 452; Commissioner of Stamp Duties (NSW) v Carlenka Pty Ltd (1995) 41 NSWLR 329 at 336; Ryledar Pty Ltd v Euphoric Pty Ltd (2007) 69 NSWLR 603 at 641; [2007] NSWCA 65 at [179]. See also Leonard Bromley, ‘Rectification in Equity’ (1971) 87 LQR 532; Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, para 26–30. Contrast Chartbrook Ltd v Persimmon Homes Ltd [2009] 1 AC 1101; [2009] UKHL 38.
34.
See [21-07].
35.
But cf Olympia Sauna Shipping Co SA v Shinwa Kaiun Kaisha Ltd (The Ypatia Halcoussi) [1985] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 364 at 370.
36.
See NSW Medical Defence Union Ltd v Transport Industries Insurance Co Ltd (1986) 6 NSWLR 740 at 753.
37.
See David McLauchlan, ‘The “Drastic” Remedy of Rectification for Unilateral Mistake’ (2008) 124 LQR 608.
38.
[1961] Ch 555. See also Johnston v Arnaboldi [1990] 2 Qd R 138 at 144.
39.
See Chapter 24.
40.
See The Ypatia Halcoussi [1985] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 364 at 371; Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, para 26–75.
41.
[1975] Ch 133.
42.
[1975] Ch 133 at 141.
43
[1975] Ch 133 at 140.
44.
Commerce Consolidated Pty Ltd v Johnstone [1976] VR 724. It has also been applied in New Zealand. See Leighton v Parton [1976] 1 NZLR 165.
45.
See Commission for the New Towns v Cooper (Great Britain) Ltd [1995] Ch 259 (actual knowledge not required) (see David Mossop (1996) 10 JCL 259); Leibler v Air New Zealand Ltd (No 2) [1999] 1 VR 1 at 14, 24 (questions not decided).
46.
See, eg Paget v Marshall (1884) 28 Ch D 255; May v Platt [1900] 1 Ch 616. Cf Solle v Butcher [1950] 1 KB 671; Joscelyne v Nissen [1970] 2 QB 86.
47.
See Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, para 26–75.
48.
[1975] Ch 133.
49.
[1975] Ch 133 at 140–1. Cf Australia Hotel Co Ltd v Moore (1899) 20 LR (NSW) Eq 155.
50.
Powell v Smith (1872) LR 14 Eq 85; Stewart v Kennedy (1890) 15 App Cas 108.
51.
See, eg Petelin v Cullen (1975) 132 CLR 355; 6 ALR 129; PT Ltd v Maradona Pty Ltd (1992) 25 NSWLR 643.
52.
See [15-39].
53.
Gibbons v Wright (1954) 91 CLR 423 at 442, 443, 444, 446; PT Ltd v Maradona Pty Ltd (1991) 25 NSWLR 643 at 673. Cf Ford (by his tutor Watkinson) v Perpetual Trustees Victoria Ltd (2009) 75 NSWLR 42 at 60–1; 257 ALR 658 at 676; [2009] NSWCA 186 at [71].
54.
Crago v McIntyre [1976] 1 NSWLR 729 at 737.
55.
(1584) 2 Co Rep 9a; 76 ER 408.
56.
[1911] 1 KB 489.
57.
[1971] AC 1004 (see [21-15]).
58.
[1971] AC 1004.
59.
Sub nom Gallie v Lee [1969] 2 Ch 17.
60.
Between the hearings in the English Court of Appeal and House of Lords Mrs Gal-lie died and Saunders, her executor, took the appeal to the House.
61.
[1971] AC 1004 at 1016.
62.
Cf Ford (by his tutor Watkinson) v Perpetual Trustees Victoria Ltd (2009) 75 NSWLR 42; 257 ALR 658; [2009] NSWCA 186 (illiterate and intellectually impaired person who executed documents as a result of influence of another did not know what he was signing).
63.
[1971] AC 1004.
64.
See [21-17]–[21-19]. See also [21-20] (filling in blanks).
65.
[1971] AC 1004.
66.
(1975) 132 CLR 355 at 360.
67.
(1975) 132 CLR 355 at 359–60.
68.
Cf Howatson v Webb [1908] 1 Ch 1 (affirming [1907] 1 Ch 537); Blay v Pollard and Morris [1930] 1 KB 628; Mercantile Credit Co Ltd v Hamblin [1965] 2 QB 242. But cf Muskham Finance Ltd v Howard [1963] 1 QB 904.
69.
(1971) 5 SASR 347.
70.
(1869) LR 4 CP 704.
71.
(1871) LR 7 Ch App 75.
72.
(1871) LR 7 Ch App 75 at 88 and 89. See also Howatson v Webb [1908] 1 Ch 1, where Farwell LJ questioned whether a person who is not blind or illiterate is not always estopped by a signature.
73.
[1971] AC 1004. See also Avon Finance Co Ltd v Bridger (1979) [1985] 2 All ER 281.
74.
(1869) LR 4 CP 704.
75.
Carlisle and Cumberland Banking Co v Bragg [1911] 1 KB 489 (see [21-14]) was overruled.
76.
See, eg National Provincial Bank of England v Jackson (1886) 33 Ch D 1.
77.
See, eg King v Smith [1900] 2 Ch 425; Howatson v Webb [1908] 1 Ch 1.
78.
See Petelin v Cullen (1975) 132 CLR 355.
79.
Cf Lee v Ah Gee [1920] VLR 278; Taylor v Smith [1926] VLR 100 (affirmed (1926) 38 CLR 48); Nemtsas v Nemtsas [1957] VR 191; Petelin v Cullen (1975) 132 CLR 355.
80.
See [20-52]–[20-54].
81.
United Dominions Trust Ltd v Western [1976] QB 513 (not following Campbell Discount Co Ltd v Gall [1961] 1 QB 431). See also Egan v Ross (1928) 29 SR (NSW) 382. See Bob Allcock, ‘Documents Signed in Blank’ (1982) 45 MLR 18.
82.
See Warburton v National Westminster Finance Australia Ltd (1988) 15 NSWLR 238.
[page 487]
Chapter 22
Duress [22-01] Duress and undue influence. In the discussion of contracts induced by misleading conduct (Chapter 18) and contracts affected by mistake (Chapters 20 and 21) we were concerned with the impact of misinformation on contractual assent.1 In this chapter and the next (concerned with ‘undue influence’) the concern is with situations in which contractual assent of one of the parties is affected by pressure. A third category of case is the subject of Chapter 24, in which the focus is not the assent of the party seeking relief from the contract so much as the ‘advantage-taking’ involved in unconscionable conduct. Since pressure may be associated with misinformation or unconscionable conduct, these are overlapping categories. Indeed, the distinction between undue influence and unconscionable conduct is now often difficult to draw.2 It is, however, clear that duress (sometimes termed ‘compulsion’) is a distinct category. In any civilised legal system contracts entered into by a party in consequence of serious threats, such as death or physical injury, must be treated as either nullities or, at the least, unenforceable. The only problem, apart from determining the precise consequences of such duress, lies in working out a definition of the scope of the concept. Duress and undue influence have generally been treated as distinct forms of pressure.3 Thus, whereas ‘duress’ signifies a procuring of contractual assent by an illegitimate threat, ‘undue influence’ signifies an influence which may fall short of that compulsion, and not associated with any illegitimate threat,4 but which is deemed ‘undue’ nonetheless.
General Points [22-02] Contract voidable not void. Where the elements of a binding contract are present, and the parties appear to have had an intention to contract, the courts are reluctant to treat the contract as void merely because some vitiating factor,
such as mistake or misrepresentation, has impaired the decision of one party (or both) to contract.5 [page 488] Accordingly, most judicial pronouncements favour the view that a contract procured by duress is not void, but merely ‘voidable’.6 Thus, although in Barton v Armstrong7 a declaration was made that the subject deed was ‘void’ between the parties to the litigation, this should be interpreted as a reference to the effectiveness of Barton’s supervening election to rescind the contract.8 [22-03] Basis on which contract voidable. Notwithstanding that an element of duress is present, there is, ex hypothesi, an element of ‘willingness to contract’. That is to say, acts which normally give rise to a binding contract have occurred with knowledge that a contract is being entered into and of what it says. It is therefore difficult to say that there is an absence of contractual intent sufficient to make the contract void. Instead, because one party’s contractual assent was procured by pressure which the law regards as improper, that party has a right to rescind the contract. Since there is, as in the case of misrepresentation, an ability to rescind the contract, it is open to the party imposed upon to enforce the contract and to become bound unconditionally by it. This is the effect of an election to affirm the contract. The opportunity to make the choice between rescission and affirmation is beneficial. It also assists in the protection of third parties, and is moreover an important element by which the concept has in recent years been extended. [22-04] Duress and the overborne will. Because a contract affected by duress is not regarded as void, the contract will be binding until set aside by an election on the part of the victim or by court order. Nevertheless, there is an element of controversy in the cases which arises from the way in which many definitions of duress talk in terms of an effect on a person’s ‘will’, ‘consent’ or ‘assent’. For example, in Occidental Worldwide Investment Corp v Skibs A/S Avanti (The Siboen and The Sibotre),9 Kerr J said that the court must ‘at least be satisfied that the consent of the other party was overborne by compulsion so as to deprive him of any animus contrahendi’. And in Pao On v Lau Yiu Long10 the Privy Council said that ‘duress, whatever form it takes, is a coercion of the will so as to vitiate consent’. Although the paradigm case of duress, involving threats of physical
injury to a person, seems to have been allowed to denote a requirement of total control over the mind affected, this does not justify the adoption of a general theory in [page 489] which duress is only present if the will of the person relying on the concept is ‘overborne’. Reliance on an ‘overborne will theory’ for duress is not consistent with DPP for Northern Ireland v Lynch,11 and that case became a stimulus for a lively academic debate.12 In Lynch, a decision on the criminal law, it was accepted that the availability of duress as a defence to a criminal charge did not depend on absence of ‘intention’, ‘will’ or ‘choice’. The case was not cited in the contract cases until Crescendo Management Pty Ltd v Westpac Banking Corp,13 where the New South Wales Court of Appeal rejected the overborne will as a theory of duress. Expressions such as ‘overborne’, ‘will’, ‘voluntarily’, ‘vitiate’, ‘consent’, ‘compulsion’, ‘coercion’, and ‘intention’ are notoriously difficult and can reduce the debate to one of semantics. However, it can now be accepted: (1) it is inherent in the nature of a threat that alternative courses of action are open to the victim, even if one may be at the cost of the victim’s life; (2) that of the alternatives, the victim chose that of entering into the contract; (3) if the expression ‘overborne will’ is used to indicate a total absence of intention to make the particular contract, it is inconsistent with the act of contracting and must result in voidness ab initio; and (4) the illegitimate pressure on which the claim of duress is based need not have been the sole cause of the decision to contract. [22-05] Causation.14 The fourth of the points made above is most significant. It is inconsistent with an overborne will theory that a party can rely on duress where the pressure complained against is not the sole or at least principal cause of the decision to contract. It was accepted in Barton v Armstrong15 that it is sufficient for the pressure to be a cause of the decision to contract. The majority in the Privy Council thought16 that there was ‘an obvious analogy between setting aside a disposition for duress or undue influence and setting it aside for
fraud’. The New South Wales Court of Appeal, when rejecting the overborne will theory in Crescendo Management Pty Ltd v Westpac Banking Corp,17 treated this idea as applicable to all forms [page 490] of duress. On the facts in that case, there was no duress because the element of causation was lacking. This brings the law of duress into line with other areas where a right of rescission arises, such as fraud and mistake, in that it is sufficient for the misrepresentation, mistake or duress to be an inducement to enter into the contract. [22-06] Burden of proof. An initial burden of proof rests on the person who alleges that the contract was entered into as a result of duress. It must be proved that the appropriate kind of threat and pressure was made, and that this was directed to the procuring of contractual assent.18 In Barton v Armstrong19 it was held that once the party seeking relief establishes these matters, the onus shifts to the other party to show that this ‘contributed nothing’ to the decision to contract. In Crescendo Management Pty Ltd v Westpac Banking Corp20 this analysis was treated as applicable to all forms of duress.
Forms of Duress Introduction [22-07] Overall development. The development of the law relating to duress has been concerned with defining the kinds of conduct allowed to form the basis of duress and of the necessary effect on the party threatened. However, the cases have witnessed a process of simplification. Thus, it is no longer required that the conduct constituting the threat should fit into a preconceived category other than the general requirement of ‘illegitimacy’.21 Money paid under duress is recoverable under the principle of restitution for
unjust enrichment.22 To this extent, there is no requirement that the duress lead to a contract. However, the main concern23 is with the impact of duress in the contract context, and in that context restitution is not available until the contract has been rescinded.
Duress to the Person or Goods [22-08] Duress to the person. It has long been a principle of the common law that a contract is not enforceable against a party whose assent was procured by actual or threatened violence to his or her person.24 This includes actual or threatened deprivation of liberty.25 [page 491] It is not, however, essential that the threat be to the person who seeks to avoid the contract: a threat to the person’s parent, spouse or child is sufficient.26 [22-09] Duress of goods. Violence to or confinement of the person or a threat thereof is a narrow category. However, the common law also recognised a form of duress involving goods. Duress of goods involves an unlawful taking, detention, damaging or destruction of a person’s goods. Money paid for the release of the payer’s goods unlawfully detained by another, or to avoid the wrongful seizure of goods, is recoverable in an action for restitution.27 A person detaining goods will virtually always do so under a claim of right. So, the possibility is available that an agreement to pay for their release constitutes a final compromise or settlement of a bona fide claim.28 However, the cases on duress of goods acknowledged the possibility that if the claim to retain them was known to be bad, the contract to pay for their release would not be enforceable.29 By contrast, duress of the person will virtually always be wrongful. [22-10] The payment/agreement distinction. Where money is paid without contract it is recoverable on proof of duress to the person or goods.30 But the scope of duress was originally limited by a distinction between a payment for the release of goods and an agreement to pay for the release of goods. This arose from an alleged distinction between duress of the person and duress of goods. It was stated in Skeate v Beale:31
The former is a constraining force, which not only takes away the free agency, but may leave no room for appeal to the law for a remedy: a man, therefore, is not bound by the agreement which he enters into under such circumstances: but the fear that goods may be taken or injured does not deprive any one of his free agency who possesses that ordinary degree of firmness which the law requires all to exert.
This reasoning is psychologically unrealistic. As Collins MR observed in a different context in Kaufman v Gerson,32 ‘… what does it matter what particular form of coercion is used, so long as the will is coerced? Some [page 492] persons would be more easily coerced by moral pressure … than by the threat of physical violence’. Once it is conceded that violence or a threat of violence to an individual other than the contracting party can be within the common law notion of duress to the contracting party,33 there is no reason to insist that duress of a contracting party’s goods lies outside it. Given the development of a general doctrine of economic duress,34 relief cannot be refused simply on the basis that the case involved payment pursuant to contract, rather than a simple payment of money. It was therefore acknowledged in Hawker Pacific Pty Ltd v Helicopter Charter Pty Ltd35 that the distinction drawn in Skeate v Beale is no longer good law. Accordingly, where it is established that conduct amounting to duress contributed to entry into a contract, that conduct justifies rescission of the contract by the other party even if there is no duress to the person.36
Economic Duress37 [22-11] Payments made under compulsion. Any general distinction between payment and agreement to pay is impossible to maintain today in the light of the development of a concept of economic duress. The first step is to see how payments made under compulsion — where there is no pretence of contract — are prima facie recoverable.38 In Smith v William Charlick Ltd,39 a flour miller yielded to a demand from the Wheat Harvest Board of South Australia for additional payment in respect of wheat sold to him by the Board. The Board was his sole source of supply. The Board was not (and did not claim to be) legally entitled. It claimed to be ‘morally’ entitled to the further payment, and intimated that unless payment was made it would not supply the plaintiff with any more wheat. The plaintiff sued to
recover the payment. On the facts, the High Court held that the claim failed. Knox CJ said:40 In the present case there was no mistake of fact, no threat of unauthorised interference with the person or the property or any legal right of the respondent, and no demand made under colour of office. The payment was made with full knowledge of all material facts. The respondent knew that the Board was not, and did not claim to be, legally entitled to demand the money. It was paid, not in order to have that done which the Board was
[page 493] legally bound to do, but in order to induce the Board to do that which it was under no legal obligation to do.
Isaacs J observed:41 It is conceded that the only ground on which the promise to repay could be implied is ‘compulsion’. The payment is said by the respondent not to have been ‘voluntary’ but ‘forced’ from it within the contemplation of the law. Leaving aside, for the present, the question whether in law the payment was ‘forced’ from the respondent by some undue advantage taken of its situation having regard to the Wheat Harvest legislation, the point is whether the Board’s insistence was what is regarded as ‘compulsion’ from the simple standpoint of common law. ‘Compulsion’ in relation to a payment of which refund is sought, and whether it is also variously called ‘coercion’, ‘extortion’, ‘exaction’, or ‘force’, includes every species of duress or conduct analogous to duress, actual or threatened, exerted by or on behalf of the payee and applied to the person or the property or any right of the person who pays or, in some cases, of a person related to or in affinity with him. Such compulsion is a legal wrong, and the law provides a remedy by raising a fictional promise to repay. Apart from any additional feature presented by the relevant legislation, it is plain that a mere abstention from selling goods to a man except on condition of his making a stated payment cannot, in the absence of some special relation, answer the description of ‘compulsion’, however serious his situation arising from other circumstances may be …
[22-12] Claim for restitution. The importance of Smith v William Charlick Ltd42 lies in the recognition of a plaintiff’s right of recovery in cases where the payment is made under compulsion.43 The second step is to illustrate that where a payment is made under illegitimate economic pressure, pursuant to an agreement which is not in point of law supported by consideration, the payment is also recoverable in restitution for unjust enrichment. In T A Sundell & Sons Pty Ltd v Emm Yannoulatos (Overseas) Pty Ltd,44 there was a contract for the purchase by the plaintiff-buyer from the defendant-seller of galvanised iron at £109.15.0 a ton and the buyer established a letter of credit accordingly. Some months later the seller told the buyer that an increase in the price of the iron (which was to come from France) was inevitable and requested
that the amount of the letter of credit be increased, in default of which the plaintiff would not be supplied. The buyer ordered the same quantity of iron afresh at £140 per ton, at the same time asking the seller to acknowledge that the buyer should have the right to contend that the original contract required the defendant to supply at £109.15.0 a ton. The plaintiff amended and increased the letter of credit accordingly. The seller utilised the increased letter of credit. However, there was no consideration to support the variation of the original contract of sale, due to the fact that the seller did no more than perform an existing contractual obligation.45 The buyer successfully sued to recover the excess [page 494] as money paid under ‘duress’ or ‘compulsion’. The Full Court of the Supreme Court of New South Wales rejected a contention that recoverability as for payment made ‘under compulsion’ should not be allowed where all that is proved is that ‘a compulsive threat has been made to refrain from performing merely a contractual duty as distinct from a threat to refrain from performing a statutory duty or a threat to interfere with a proprietary right of the payer’.46 [22-13] Contracts supported by consideration. Lord Scarman for the Privy Council in Pao On v Lau Yiu Long47 (which involved a threat of breach of contract) expressed the view obiter, that ‘there is nothing contrary to principle in recognising economic duress as a factor which may render a contract voidable, provided always that the basis of such recognition is that it must amount to a coercion of will, which vitiates consent’. Lord Scarman also said that the victim ‘must have entered the contract against his will, must have had no alternative course open to him’48 and that ‘the pressure must be such that the victim’s consent to the contract was not a voluntary act on his part’.49 In Universe Tankships Inc of Monrovia v International Transport Workers Federation (The Universe Sentinel)50 Lord Diplock identified the rationale of the development of the common law in relation to a party’s contractual assent procured by duress in these terms:51 The rationale is that his apparent consent was induced by pressure exercised upon him by that other party which the law does not regard as legitimate, with the consequence that the consent is treated in law as revocable unless approbated either expressly or by implication after the illegitimate pressure has ceased to operate on his mind. It is a rationale similar to that which underlies the avoidability of contracts entered into and the recovery of money exacted under colour of office, or under undue influence or in consequence of threats of physical duress.
Leaving aside the terminological difficulties in these statements, they clearly recognise a category of economic duress at a very high level of authority. And the early Australian authorities referred to above52 have justifiably been treated in the recent Australian cases53 as anticipating the recognition of a general concept of economic duress in England. Thus, in North Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v Hyundai Construction Co Ltd (The Atlantic Baron),54 which involved a shipowner-payer’s claim to recover an extra [page 495] payment that it agreed to make and did make in order to avoid the shipbuilderpayee’s threat to break a shipbuilding contract between them, Mocatta J applied the view that duress is not limited to duress to the person and goods. He held that ‘economic duress’ may suffice. In his view a threat to break an existing contract can constitute such economic duress, and on the facts did amount to duress. Accordingly, the contract — tainted by economic duress — was voidable. These authorities therefore support a third step in our analysis, since they recognise the ability to recover payments made pursuant to a contract supported by consideration. Nevertheless, until the contract has been rescinded, money paid under the contract is ‘irrecoverable in restitution’.55 Although there is therefore no direct right to claim restitution for unjust enrichment, the importance of economic duress is that it gives rise to a right to rescind the contract. Once the contract has been rescinded, any payment made can be recovered, ‘on the ground either of duress or possibly of failure of consideration’.56
Elements of Duress57 [22-14] Introduction. In Universe Tankships Inc of Monrovia v International Transport Workers Federation (The Universe Sentinel)58 Lord Scarman noted ‘two elements in the wrong of duress’, namely pressure and the illegitimacy of the pressure. He explained:59 There must be pressure, the practical effect of which is compulsion or the absence of choice. Compulsion is variously described in the authorities as coercion or the vitiation of consent. The classic case of duress is, however, not the lack of will to submit but the victim’s intentional submission arising from the realisation that there is no other practical choice open to him. This is the thread of principle which links the early law of duress (threat to life or limb) with later developments when the law came
also to recognise as duress first the threat to property and now the threat to a man’s business or trade.
This may be expanded to an approach having three elements. First, and fundamentally, there must be an element of wrongful conduct or unlawful demand constituting illegitimate pressure. Second, there must be an analysis of why the victim has chosen to enter into the contract rather than to pursue a claim in respect of the pressure. Third, it must be considered whether the contract relied upon by the party who exerted the threats is in fact valid under the requirement of consideration. Analysis of these three elements will give rise to a decision that there was or was not a contract [page 496] affected by duress. That will leave a fourth issue for analysis, namely whether relief is available to the victim. Although rare, there is no rule that duress cannot occur where the suggestion of an alteration to contractual relations comes first from the party who subsequently seeks to rely on duress. Thus, in B & S Contracts and Design Ltd v Victor Green Publications Ltd60 the plaintiffs agreed to prepare a hall for an exhibition. They were experiencing industrial difficulties with employees who had been made redundant and were seeking payment. The defendants said they would pay money to the plaintiffs to pay the employees. It was held that this payment was made under duress even though there was merely a veiled threat and no demand. The clear inference was that unless the payment was made the plaintiffs would not perform the contract. [22-15] Analysis. In the cases, the four elements identified above, particularly the first two, are so bound up together that it is difficult to justify a detailed separate treatment of each. A separate analysis of the third and fourth elements is justifiable,61 because we need to examine the way in which general principles of rescission apply to contracts affected by economic duress. The other elements — relevant conduct and the decision to contract — are dealt with under the general heading ‘illegitimate pressure’.62 [22-16] Duress and consideration. There are three fundamental points about the element of consideration. First, cases such as T A Sundell & Sons Pty Ltd v Emm Yannoulatos (Overseas) Pty Ltd63 indicate that the victim will find it relatively
easy to recover payments made under duress where the ‘contract’ on which the other person relies is not supported by consideration. As we have seen,64 the law allows a person to recover money paid under duress in an action in restitution. Thus, once a case was perceived to be a ‘payment’ case rather than an ‘agreement’ case, it is sufficient to characterise such payments as having been not ‘voluntary’ and as having been made under ‘compulsion’ or ‘practical compulsion’.65 Second, recent developments indicate that the presence of consideration does not necessarily bar the victim’s claim. It is, however, required that the contract be rescinded on the basis of the duress.66 Third, the fact that there has been illegitimate pressure does not mean that consideration otherwise sufficient to give rise to a contract, is somehow obliterated by the duress.67 This follows from, or helps to justify, the [page 497] conclusion that a contract affected by duress is not void but merely voidable.
Illegitimate Pressure68 [22-17] Introduction. The concern of the law of duress should now be with identifying ‘those forms of pressure which the law should regard as legitimate’,69 rather than improper and unacceptable. Or, to put the matter from a wider perspective, it is concern with the permissible limits of coercion in our society, and ‘the extent to which society can legitimately require people to stand up to threats when they are made, rather than to submit and litigate afterwards’.70 Factual matters will be relevant to the effect produced by a threat found to be wrongful and to that extent at least illegitimate. These include: the nature of the threat; the demand made; the presence or absence of protest by the victim; and the courses open to the victim.
[22-18] Mere commercial pressure. A threat may affect the victim’s mind yet not constitute duress. As Lords Wilberforce and Simon observed in Barton v Armstrong,71 ‘the pressure must be one of a kind which the law does not regard as legitimate’. On this basis, ‘mere commercial pressure’ as such, even of an extreme kind, is not duress. So, in Smith v William Charlick Ltd,72 the threat by the Wheat Board (a monopolist supplier of wheat) to flour millers not to make new contracts, or have any future business dealings with a particular miller unless he paid it money which he was not legally liable to pay, was held not to be illegitimate in a context where the relevant legislation did not oblige the Board to supply. The case may be contrasted with White Rose Flour Milling Co Pty Ltd v Australian Wheat Board,73 in which there was a subsisting contract and the threat was not to supply in breach of that contract. In seeking to mark off those agreements which are the result of unacceptable pressure and those which, although negotiated as a result of pressure, ought not to be regarded as within the purview of duress, an element of uncertainty is inevitable. It is, nevertheless, a cause for concern.74 Moreover, since it is recognised that the exertion of pressure is not intrinsically wrong, that is, that the law permits some pressure to be [page 498] brought to bear, it is essential that the concept of economic duress not be made so broad that it impedes the renegotiation of contracts.75 [22-19] Lawful threats. Prima facie, a threat to do something the actual doing of which would be lawful, is legitimate.76 But lawfulness cannot be conclusive. For example, a lawful threat may be accompanied by an unlawful demand. Thus, in Kaufman v Gerson77 the English Court of Appeal accepted that blackmail, in that case a threat to prosecute the victim’s husband for a crime if she would not undertake to pay his debt, was duress. It is not unlawful to threaten legal proceedings, and such a threat will not normally constitute illegitimate pressure. But Kaufman v Gerson illustrates that such a threat may in exceptional cases be illegitimate. In J & S Holdings Pty Ltd v NRMA Insurance Ltd78 the Full Federal Court stated that an illegitimate threat does not become legitimate because the person making the threats states that proceedings may be brought. Thus, if the victim, a debtor who is threatened with legal proceedings to recover an amount in excess of the creditor’s entitlement,
succumbs to a demand for the excessive amount in order to prevent the proceedings being brought, the debtor may recover the amount of the excess. In J & S Holdings Pty Ltd v NRMA Insurance Ltd a debtor was threatened with proceedings which would lead to a winding up order, and it was said that this may be regarded as illegitimate pressure even though the creditor is entitled to sue for the amount actually owing, and to put the debtor into liquidation for nonpayment of that sum.79 [22-20] Bona fide conduct. A person’s conduct may be bona fide, that is, in good faith, and yet not legally justifiable. For example, a person may honestly believe that a particular course of conduct is lawful even though it is not. This idea has its main application in cases where a threat not to perform the contract leads to a contract of compromise or settlement.80 By definition, one of the parties (perhaps both) is wrong in the claim made. Even if it is the party making a threat not to perform who is wrong, the contract is not usually regarded as entered into under duress.81 It would [page 499] throw that area of the law into profound confusion if a threat not to perform were to be regarded as illegitimate pressure merely because of an error in assessment of contractual obligation or liability. An inquiry into duress is, however, justified if the party making the threat expresses it in the form ‘whether or not I am correct in my assessment of obligation or liability, I do not intend to perform unless you enter into a contract by which you abandon your rights against me’.82 It will be explained later83 that where a party is bound by a contract, a statement that it will not be performed may amount to a repudiation of the contract. Although such conduct is not in itself a breach of contract,84 it is generally accepted that for the purposes of duress the conduct may be wrongful even though the promisee acquiesces, and does not take the step of terminating the performance of the contract. Conversely, a statement that the promisor will not perform, in the bona fide belief that the contract does not require performance, although not constituting a repudiation, may be wrongful for the purposes of duress.85 [22-21] Wrongful conduct. The illegitimacy of the pressure or threat may be obvious. In Occidental Worldwide Investment Corp v Skibs A/S Avanti (The Siboen and The Sibotre),86 Kerr J instanced a threat to burn down the house or
slash a valuable picture of the contracting party. Equally, however, it is clear that less extreme forms of conduct will constitute duress. An obvious starting point is wrongful conduct. But what does ‘wrongful’ mean? In Crescendo Management Pty Ltd v Westpac Banking Corp87 McHugh JA, speaking for the New South Wales Court of Appeal, said that pressure will be illegitimate if it ‘consists of unlawful threats or amounts to unconscionable conduct’. This should not be taken as implying that every unlawful threat will constitute illegitimate pressure: it is too simplistic to say that any wrongful conduct is sufficient to justify a claim of duress.88 Similarly, conduct is ‘unconscionable’ only if there is an exploitation by one party of another’s position of disadvantage, and McHugh JA’s reference to ‘unconscionable conduct’ should not be taken as saying that every instance of unfair conduct involves duress.89 It is nevertheless true that where a person enters into a new contract in order to avoid the carrying out of the threat, it may be appropriate to conclude that economic duress is present and that the contract is voidable. Thus, in North Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v Hyundai Construction Co Ltd (The Atlantic Baron)90 a shipbuilding contract was agreed between North Ocean [page 500] and Hyundai for the vessel subsequently known as the Atlantic Baron. The contract was to build a tanker for a fixed price (in United States dollars), payable in five instalments. In order to secure the repayment of the price should the contract not be fulfilled, Hyundai was required to open a letter of credit in favour of North Ocean. After the first instalment was paid the dollar was devalued by 10 per cent. Hyundai then demanded that the amount of all outstanding instalments be increased by 10 per cent. North Ocean’s legal advisers informed them that there was no obligation to pay any such sum and so North Ocean initially refused to pay. This advice was correct. Hyundai said that unless the increased payment was made the contract would be cancelled. Since Hyundai did not have a bona fide belief that it was entitled to the extra payments, its demand was a repudiation. But North Ocean paid the extra amounts, and Hyundai provided consideration for the payments by increasing the amount of the letter of credit. Nevertheless, Mocatta J held that the contract under which North Ocean paid the extra amounts was voidable for duress.91 [22-22] Consequences if threat carried out. In Universe Tankships Inc of
Monrovia v International Transport Workers Federation (The Universe Sentinel)92 it was conceded that a contribution which shipowners had made to a welfare fund had been exacted by economic duress by an international federation of trade unions. Lord Diplock expressed this as a concession ‘that the financial consequences to the shipowners … were so catastrophic as to amount to a coercion of the shipowners’ will which vitiated their consent to those agreements’ and to the payments made by them.93 The shipowners had, in response to the duress, entered into two agreements in writing as well as paying the money sought to be recovered. More recently, in Vantage Navigation Corp v Suhail and Saud Bahwan Building Materials LLC (The Alev)94 the plaintiffs chartered their vessel the Alev to charterers who later became insolvent. At the first loading port steel was loaded and freight pre-paid bills of lading were issued. These provided for the steel to be carried to Muscat. The defendants had purchased the steel for a price of about $US3.3 million and property in the steel had passed to them. Because of their difficulty in obtaining payment of the carriage charges from the charterers, the plaintiffs sought direct financial assistance from the defendants, who became increasingly concerned because the delay to the cargo was seriously dislocating their business. There was little scope for mitigating their position by buying in steel from elsewhere. It was made clear to them that the cargo was not going to be delivered. Although the plaintiffs fully appreciated that they were contractually bound to deliver the defendants’ cargo, they retained control. The defendants were aware that on occasions shipowners faced with this situation had sometimes simply dumped cargo at some port convenient to themselves, or even sold it. An agreement was signed which stated that in [page 501] consideration of the plaintiffs refraining from arresting or detaining the cargo, and further agreeing to abandon any claim against the cargo arising out of the charterers’ failure to fulfil their contractual obligations, the defendants would pay the port expenses and discharge costs and abandon any claims against the plaintiffs or the ship. The defendants paid the sums stipulated. Subsequently, the vessel arrived and discharged its cargo. During discharge, the defendants rescinded the agreement, arrested the vessel and recovered the money paid in a local court. The plaintiffs then sued in England to recover damages for breach of contract. They failed because the agreement under which the money was paid to
the plaintiffs was vitiated by duress. The principal reason given was that the defendants had no real option, if they were to get their cargo, but to enter into the agreement and pay the money. Nevertheless, since litigation is always open, the crucial question is not whether the victim had an alternative. Rather, it is whether the choice between the alternatives was made freely or under pressure.95 A threat of a breach of contract will not suffice if the victim makes a ‘commercial decision’ to submit rather than to litigate, or if the threat to breach is commercially reasonable because of unexpected difficulties encountered by the threatening party in performing the contract.96 However, in North Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v Hyundai Construction Co Ltd (The Atlantic Baron),97 the fact that North Ocean had agreed a charterparty with Shell was regarded as significant even though, allowing for the increased price of the vessel, a substantial profit would be made on the charter with Shell. The point seems to be that, on the facts, the option of terminating the contract with Hyundai, and looking for an alternative vessel, was not a viable one.98 Such a vessel may not have been obtainable. Moreover, it could not be argued against North Ocean that it could have recovered damages for breach of that charterparty from Hyundai, because full compensation might not have been obtainable under the contract rules,99 and because the damage to its commercial reputation implicit in breaching a contract with Shell might have far outweighed any sum which could have been recovered from Hyundai. [22-23] Protest. Many of the cases refer to the relevance of protest by the victim to the course of conduct required by the threatening party. The relevance of this can easily be overstated. In Mason v New South Wales100 Windeyer J said that the presence (or absence) of protest is relevant to the question whether the victim acted freely or under compulsion. But he also recognised that it is not conclusive.101 [page 502]
Duress By and Against Third Parties [22-24] Duress by third parties. Although less common than duress exercised by one contracting party against the other, duress may be exercised by a third party or against a third party. In such a case, a contracting party seeking to rescind on the ground of duress must show that the other contracting party knew
of the duress,102 or that the person who exercised the duress was an agent in connection with the making of the contract.103 [22-25] Duress against third parties. Consideration of duress against a third party requires us to distinguish three situations. First, a threat may be made to a contracting party that an evil will befall another. An example would be a threat to shoot a hostage. There is no à priori rule that the threat cannot qualify as duress applied to the contracting party: the closer the relationship between the latter and the potential sufferer, the stronger will be the presumption that the threat was a reason for the making of the contract. Second, there is the special case of a threat to a contracting agent that an evil will befall the agent’s principal who is a party to the contract. For example, in Cumming v Ince104 an agreement entered into by the plaintiff’s attorney, at a time when the plaintiff was confined in a lunatic asylum, to the effect that the deeds to the plaintiff’s property would be deposited with the solicitors for the defendants if the defendants would not, as they would otherwise have done, seek the continued confinement of the plaintiff, was held not binding on the plaintiff. Third, a threat may be made to a third party that an evil will befall that person or some other non-contracting party. For example, in the case of a contract of guarantee, there might be a threat to the person whose liability is being guaranteed. It is difficult to accept that a guarantor would be liable where the debtor had incurred the principal liability under duress,105 although the position might differ according to whether the principal debtor had rescinded or affirmed the principal contract.106
Remedies for Duress [22-26] Introduction. It is sufficient to give a brief description of the remedies available for duress. Assuming that a contract was induced by duress,107 the primary remedy is rescission.108 Thus, the party affected is [page 503] entitled to rescind the contract in accordance with general principles of election
between rights. In cases where no benefit was conferred under the contract rescission will be sufficient protection for the plaintiff. However, the plaintiff may seek a formal order confirming rescission or setting aside the contract. Rescission will not be sufficient where a benefit was conferred under the contract. The plaintiff’s claim to recover the benefit (usually money) is governed by principles of restitution.109 Generally, there seems no right to damages.110 However, certain statutory provisions must also be noticed under which damages may be claimed.111 [22-27] Rescission. Particularly in the economic duress cases, rescission assumes a significant position in determining the remedial position of the plaintiff. As indicated above,112 rescission is the step which must precede the action to recover money or the monetary value of a benefit conferred. Accordingly, if rescission is not available, the plaintiff will fail in the action for recovery. Thus, in North Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v Hyundai Construction Co Ltd (The Atlantic Baron),113 although the vessel was delivered on 27 November 1974 it was not until 30 July 1975 that North Ocean claimed repayment of the money paid. Mocatta J decided in favour of Hyundai on the basis that North Ocean had affirmed the contract. This was an application of the general rule114 that rescission ceases to be available once the contract has been affirmed. [22-28] Restitution. In most of the duress cases the plaintiff seeks no more than the return of money paid. Whether paid under contract or not, the basis for recovery is the restitutionary right to recover in reliance on the unjust enrichment of the defendant. Duress being a species of compulsion recognised by Australian law as coming within the unjust enrichment concept, the plaintiff’s argument is that the defendant has obtained a benefit which it was unjust for the defendant to receive.115 However, the general rule116 is that where a payment is made under a contract, restitution is not available until the contract has been rescinded. Once rescission has occurred, restitution will usually be awarded.117 For example, in Dimskal Shipping Co SA v International Transport Workers Federation (The Evia Luck)118 contracts made with unions who had [page 504] threatened to ‘blacklist’ a vessel were lawfully rescinded for economic duress,
and payments made under employment contracts with the crew were then recoverable in restitution. [22-29] Damages for duress. Dicta as to whether duress is actionable as a tort are inconsistent.119 In Universe Tankships Inc of Monrovia v International Transport Workers Federation (The Universe Sentinel)120 Lord Diplock explained that although the form that the duress takes ‘may, or may not, be tortious’, the ‘use of economic duress to induce another person to part with property or money is not a tort per se’. He thus explained that it is only ‘where the particular form taken by the economic duress used is itself a tort’ that an action for damages (in tort) is available.121 However, in the same case Lord Scarman, without qualification, said that it is established law that duress is actionable as a tort if it causes damage or loss.122 In the older cases123 referring to duress as a ‘wrong’ the purpose seems to have been the justification of the fictional promise to repay money, required under the now discarded implied contract theory of restitution.124 Today, it is perhaps arguable that where duress induces the making of a disadvantageous contract it ought, so far as an action for damages is concerned, to be treated as analogous to fraud. But the fact that the victim is not in any way misled makes the analogy doubtful.125 Although the matter is not entirely free from debate, Lord Diplock’s view appears to be correct, and is important in showing that ‘conduct does not have to be tortious to constitute duress’.126 [22-30] Statute. The impact of statute on the law of duress is varied. One possibility, illustrated by the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW),127 is the relaxation of the common law rules. Section 9(2)(j) allows a court to have regard to ‘whether any undue influence, unfair pressure or unfair tactics’ was exerted on or used against the party seeking relief under the Act when deciding whether the contract was unjust. Unfair pressure, whether [page 505] amounting to duress at common law or not, may justify a conclusion that the contract was unjust,128 and permit, for example, an order for rescission of the contract. A second possibility is legislation dealing with particular forms of duress. It is a question of interpretation whether the word is used in its common law sense, or
has a broader or narrower meaning.129 Section 50(1) of the Australian Consumer Law provides that: A person must not use physical force, or undue harassment or coercion, in connection with: (a) the supply or possible supply of goods or services; or (b) the payment for goods or services; or (c) the sale or grant, or the possible sale or grant, of an interest in land; or (d) the payment for an interest in land.
The context indicates that ‘coercion’ as used in this section has a wider connotation than duress under the general law. The same is true of the remedial provisions attracted by contravention. There is power to grant a wide range of remedies,130 in respect of, for example, a disadvantageous contract procured by the contravening conduct. These provisions also illustrate a third possibility, namely, the conferral of remedies not available under the common law. Thus, notwithstanding the uncertainty in relation to damages at common law for duress,131 damages may be obtained for contravention of s 50 of the Australian Consumer Law.132 1.
Chapter 19, in analysing the impact of the breach of statutory prohibitions on conduct, was more general.
2.
Cf Ross McKeand, ‘Economic Duress — Wearing the Clothes of Unconscionable Conduct’ (2001) 17 JCL 1. See further [23-16].
3.
But cf I J Hardingham, ‘Unconscionable Dealing’ in Finn, ed, Essays in Equity, 1985, pp 19–24.
4.
The terms are taken from the judgment of Isaacs J in Smith v William Charlick Ltd (1924) 34 CLR 38 at 56. See also [23-01].
5.
See, eg [18-02], [20-06].
6.
Sternbeck v Sternbeck (1968) 11 FLR 360 at 363–4; Barton v Armstrong [1973] 2 NSWLR 598 at 615, 617 (on appeal [1976] AC 104); DPP for Northern Ireland v Lynch [1975] AC 653 at 680, 695; North Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v Hyundai Construction Co Ltd (The Atlantic Baron) [1979] 1 QB 705 especially at 720–1; Pao On v Lau Yiu Long [1980] AC 614 at 634; Dimskal Shipping Co SA v International Transport Workers Federation (The Evia Luck) [1992] 2 AC 152 at 167, 168, 169, 171. But see D J Lanham, ‘Duress and Void Contracts’ (1966) 29 MLR 615.
7.
[1976] AC 104 at 120 per Lord Cross (delivering the advice of the majority of the Judicial Committee).
8.
In the Restatement (2d) Contracts (1979), §§174, 175 a contrast is drawn between cases of physical compulsion (void) and cases where the manifestation of assent is induced by an improper threat (voidable).
9.
[1976] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 293 at 336.
10.
[1980] AC 614 at 635. See also Syros Shipping Co SA v Elaghill Trading Co (The Proodos C) [1981] 3 All ER 189 at 192.
11.
[1975] AC 653, especially at 680, 695.
12.
See P S Atiyah, ‘Economic Duress and the Overborne Will’ (1982) 98 LQR 197; David Tiplady, ‘Concepts of Duress’ (1983) 99 LQR 188; P S Atiyah, ‘Duress and the Overborne Will Again’ (1983) 99 LQR 353.
13.
(1988) 19 NSWLR 40 (see Peter Birks [1990] LMCLQ 342). See also Equiticorp Finance Ltd v Bank of New Zealand (1993) 32 NSWLR 50 at 149–50; Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v C G Berbatis Holdings Pty Ltd (2003) 214 CLR 51 at 66, 70; 197 ALR 153 at 158, 162.
14.
See Nathan Tamblyn, ‘Causation and Bad Faith in Economic Duress’ (2011) 27 JCL 140.
15.
[1976] AC 104. See also Dimskal Shipping Co SA v International Transport Workers Federation (The Evia Luck) [1992] 2 AC 152 at 165.
16.
[1976] AC 104 at 118 per Lord Cross (applying a dictum of Lord Cranworth LC in Reynell v Sprye (1852) 1 De GM & G 660 at 708; 42 ER 710 at 728 (see [18-42])).
17.
(1988) 19 NSWLR 40. See also Magnacrete Ltd v Douglas-Hill (1988) 48 SASR 565 (no causal connection).
18.
See generally [22-17]–[22-23].
19.
[1976] AC 104 at 120.
20.
(1988) 19 NSWLR 40 at 46.
21.
See [22-17]–[22-23].
22.
See generally Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, ch 5.
23.
See further [22-28].
24.
Cumming v Ince (1847) 11 QB 112 at 120; 116 ER 418 at 421. For a more recent example see Barton v Armstrong [1976] AC 104.
25.
McLarnon v McLarnon (1968) 112 Sol J 419.
26.
Cf Saxon v Saxon [1976] 4 WWR 300 (husband’s threat to kill children unless wife executed deed of separation).
27.
Astley v Reynolds (1731) 2 Str 915; 93 ER 939; Green v Duckett (1883) 11 QBD 275; Maskell v Horner [1915] 3 KB 106; Mason v New South Wales (1959) 102 CLR 108 at 144. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 528. Money paid to release goods from the custody of the law may form an exception. See, eg Liverpool Marine Credit Co v Hunter (1868) 3 Ch App 479 at 487–8. However, such cases do not state any general principle: J & S Holdings Pty Ltd v NRMA Insurance Ltd (1982) 41 ALR 539 at 557.
28.
Cf Atlee v Backhouse (1838) 3 M & W 633; 113 ER 1298; Valpy v Manley (1845) 1 CB 594; 135 ER 673. See Jack Beatson, ‘Duress as a Vitiating Factor in Contract’ [1974] CLJ 97. And see [22-20].
29.
See further [22-10]. Cf Smith v Monteith (1844) 13 M & W 427; 153 ER 178 (agreement to pay in order to obtain release of a person imprisoned).
30.
See [22-09] and further [22-28].
31.
(1841) 11 Ad & E 983 at 990; 113 ER 688 at 690.
32.
[1904] 1 KB 591 at 597.
33.
See [22-08].
34.
See [22-11]–[22-13]. But cf Atlas Express Ltd v Kafco (Importers and Distributors) Ltd [1989] QB 833 at 839.
35.
(1991) 22 NSWLR 298 at 302, 306. See also Occidental Worldwide Investment Corp v Skibs A/S Avanti (The Siboen and The Sibotre) [1976] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 293 (see Jack Beatson (1976) 92 LQR 496); Magnacrete Ltd v Douglas-Hill (1988) 48 SASR 565 at 590; Dimskal Shipping Co SA v International Transport Workers Federation (The Evia Luck) [1992] 2 AC 152 at 165.
36.
See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 506, 1312.
37.
See A J Stewart, ‘Economic Duress — Legal Regulation of Commercial Pressure’ (1984) 14 MULR 410. For a suggestion scheme that the term ‘economic duress’ should be abandoned see Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Karam (2005) 64 NSWLR 149 at 165.
38.
See [22-07].
39.
(1924) 34 CLR 38.
40.
(1924) 34 CLR 38 at 51.
41.
(1924) 34 CLR 38 at 56.
42.
(1924) 34 CLR 38 (see [22-11]).
43.
See also Mason v New South Wales (1959) 102 CLR 108.
44.
(1955) 56 SR (NSW) 323. Cf Atlas Express Ltd v Kafco (Importers and Distributors) Ltd [1989] QB 833.
45.
See generally [6-41]–[6-64].
46.
(1955) 56 SR (NSW) 323 at 328. The court cited references to the application of ‘duress or conduct analogous to duress’ to ‘any right’ of the payer by Isaacs J in Smith v William Charlick Ltd (1924) 34 CLR 38 at 56. See also Nixon v Furphy (1925) 25 SR (NSW) 151 at 160 (affirmed sub nom Furphy v Nixon (1925) 37 CLR 161); Re Hooper & Grass’ Contract [1949] VLR 269 at 272–3.
47.
[1980] AC 614 at 636.
48.
[1980] AC 614 at 636. But cf [22-22].
49.
[1980] AC 614 at 636.
50.
[1983] 1 AC 366.
51.
[1983] 1 AC 366 at 384.
52.
See [22-11].
53.
See, eg J & S Holdings Pty Ltd v NRMA Insurance Ltd (1982) 41 ALR 539; Crescendo Management Pty Ltd v Westpac Banking Corp (1988) 19 NSWLR 40.
54.
[1979] QB 705 (see also [22-21]).
55.
Dimskal Shipping Co SA v International Transport Workers Federation (The Evia Luck) [1992] 2 AC 152 at 165 per Lord Goff.
56.
Dimskal Shipping Co SA v International Transport Workers Federation (The Evia Luck) [1992] 2 AC 152 at 165 per Lord Goff. See generally Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1319–1322, 1326–1327.
57.
See Nicholas Seddon, ‘Compulsion in Commercial Dealings’ in Finn, ed, Essays on Restitution, 1990, p 138.
58.
[1983] 1 AC 366 at 400.
59.
[1983] 1 AC 366 at 400.
60.
[1984] ICR 419 (see N E Palmer and Louise Catchpole (1985) 48 MLR 102). Contrast Williams v
Roffey Bros & Nicholls (Contractors) Ltd [1991] 1 QB 1 (see [6-48]). 61.
See [22-16], [22-26]–[22-30].
62.
See [22-17]–[22-23].
63.
(1955) 56 SR (NSW) 323 (see [22-12]).
64.
See [22-07], [22-11]. See further [22-28].
65.
Cf White Rose Flour Milling Co Pty Ltd v Australian Wheat Board (1944) 18 ALJ 324; Re Hooper & Grass’ Contract [1949] VLR 269; J & S Holdings Pty Ltd v NRMA Insurance Ltd (1982) 41 ALR 539.
66.
See [22-13], [22-27].
67.
Contrast the position where there is no consideration but promissory estoppel is relied on. See D & C Builders Ltd v Rees [1966] 2 QB 617 (see [7-17]).
68.
See R C Nicholls, ‘Conduct after Breach: The Position of the Party in Breach — Part II’ (1991) 3 JCL 163.
69.
David Tiplady, ‘Concepts of Duress’ (1983) 99 LQR 188 at 194.
70.
P S Atiyah, ‘Duress and the Overborne Will Again’ (1983) 99 LQR 353 at 356.
71.
[1976] AC 104 at 121.
72.
(1924) 34 CLR 38 (see [22-11]). Cf John Adams, ‘The Economics of Good Faith in Contract’ (1995) 8 JCL 126 at 127.
73.
(1944) 18 ALJ 324.
74.
See Equiticorp Finance Ltd v Bank of New Zealand (1993) 32 NSWLR 50 at 107–9 and the discussion by Andrew Phang, ‘Whither Economic Duress? Reflections on Two Recent Cases’ (1990) 53 MLR 107. Cf Deemcope Pty Ltd v Cantown Pty Ltd [1995] 2 VR 44 at 47.
75.
See J W Carter, ‘Problems in Enforcement — Part I’ (1992) 5 JCL 199 at 201–2 (tension between ‘strategic behaviour’ and ‘efficient’ renegotiation). See also J W Carter, ‘The Renegotiation of Contracts’ (1998) 13 JCL 185.
76.
Cf Hardie and Lane Ltd v Chilton [1928] 2 KB 306.
77.
[1904] 1 KB 591. Cf Thorne v Motor Trade Association [1937] AC 797 at 820–2; CTN Cash and Carry Ltd v Gallaher Ltd [1994] 4 All ER 714 (see J W Carter and Gregory Tolhurst (1996) 9 JCL 220). See also Universe Tankships Inc of Monrovia v International Transport Workers Federation (The Universe Sentinel) [1983] 1 AC 366 at 401.
78.
(1982) 41 ALR 539 at 556.
79.
But see Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Karam (2005) 64 NSWLR 149 at 168 where the New South Wales Court of Appeal suggested that the concept of duress should be ‘limited to threatened or actual unlawful conduct’. In its view, ‘lawful conduct’ should be dealt with under other vitiating factors such as unconscionable conduct.
80.
See generally [6-50]–[6-55].
81.
Cf N E Palmer and Louise Catchpole (1985) 48 MLR 102 at 107.
82.
See, eg Vantage Navigation Corp v Suhail and Saud Bahwan Building Materials LLC (The Alev) [1989] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 138 (see [22-22]).
83.
See [30-28]–[30-47].
84.
There is a requirement that the repudiation be ‘accepted’: see [30-45].
85.
See Nixon v Furphy (1925) 25 SR (NSW) 151 (affirmed sub nom Furphy v Nixon (1925) 37 CLR 161); Jones, Anglo-American Trends in Restitution, 1978, p 11.
86.
[1976] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 293 at 335.
87.
(1988) 19 NSWLR 40 at 46. See also Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Karam (2005) 64 NSWLR 149 at 164.
88.
Pao On v Lau Yiu Long [1980] AC 614.
89.
Cf Equiticorp Finance Ltd v Bank of New Zealand (1993) 32 NSWLR 50 at 149–50. See further [2316].
90.
[1979] 1 QB 705 (see Brian Coote [1980] CLJ 40).
91.
See further [22-22].
92.
[1983] 1 AC 366.
93.
[1983] 1 AC 366 at 383. It was held by a three to two majority that the demand was not protected by a statutory provision.
94.
[1989] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 138 (see P A Chandler [1989] LMCLQ 270).
95.
Mason v New South Wales (1959) 102 CLR 108 at 128. Cf Restatement (2d) Contracts (1979), §175 (‘no reasonable alternative’).
96.
See also Australian Consumer Law, s 21(2)(b) (not unconscionable conduct).
97.
[1979] QB 705 (see [22-21]). See also B & S Contracts and Design Ltd v Victor Green Publications Ltd [1984] ICR 419 at 428 (consequences must be ‘serious and immediate’).
98.
Cf Atlas Express Ltd v Kafco (Importers and Distributors) Ltd [1989] QB 833.
99.
See generally [35-23]–[35-28].
100. (1959) 102 CLR 108 at 142. Cf Universe Tankships Inc of Monrovia v International Transport Workers Federation (The Universe Sentinel) [1983] 1 AC 366 at 400. 101. See also [22-17]. 102. Kesarmal S/O Letchman Das v NKV Valliappa Chettiar S/O Nagappa Chettiar [1954] 1 WLR 380. 103. Cf [23-05]. 104. (1847) 11 QB 112; 116 ER 418. 105. But Huscombe v Standing (1607) Cro Jac 187; 79 ER 163 is an early authority to the contrary. 106. Cf [15-25] (guarantees of minors’ contracts). 107. The element of causation required is that applied to cases of fraud. See [18-20], [18-27]. 108. See [22-27]. 109. See [22-28]. 110. See [22-29]. 111. See [22-30]. 112. See [22-26]. See further [22-28]. 113. [1979] QB 705 (see [22-21]). Contrast Hawker Pacific Pty Ltd v Helicopter Charter Pty Ltd (1991) 22 NSWLR 298. 114. See, eg [18-47]. 115. See [22-07].
116. See [38-03]. 117. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 1326 and further [38-06]. In so far as the requirement of restitutio in integrum (see generally [1843]–[18-46], [38-36]) applies, the applicable principles are those governing adjustment following rescission of a contract induced by fraudulent misrepresentation. 118. [1992] 2 AC 152. See Richard O’Dair [1992] LMCLQ 145; Andrew Phang, ‘Economic Duress — Uncertainty Confirmed’ (1992) 5 JCL 147. 119. And see the exchange between R A Conti, ‘Economic Duress’ (1985) 1 Aust Bar Rev 106 and D A Staff (1985) 1 Aust Bar Rev 122. 120. [1983] 1 AC 366 at 385. See also Dimskal Shipping Co SA v International Transport Workers Federation (The Evia Luck) [1992] 2 AC 152 at 166. 121. If the duress takes the form of a threat not to perform a contract unless the plaintiff agrees to enter into a second contract, the plaintiff may claim damages in contract only if the plaintiff did not succumb to the duress, but instead elected to terminate the contract. See [30-45], [35-02]. 122. [1983] 1 AC 366 at 400 (citing Barton v Armstrong [1976] AC 104 and Pao On v Lau Yiu Long [1980] AC 614). See also Alec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil (Great Britain) Ltd [1985] 1 WLR 173 at 177 (the ‘tort of economic duress’). 123. See, eg Smith v William Charlick Ltd (1924) 34 CLR 38 at 56. 124. See [38-01], [38-07]. 125. Another argument is that where what is threatened is an unlawful act, an analogy with the tort of intimidation, for which damages are available (see Rookes v Barnard [1964] AC 1129), ought to be applied. 126. Dimskal Shipping Co SA v International Transport Workers Federation (The Evia Luck) [1992] 2 AC 152 at 169 per Lord Goff. See also at 171. 127. See generally [24-21]–[24-27]. 128. See St Clair v Petricevic (1988) ANZ Conv R ¶105. 129. See Schanka v Employment National (Administration) Pty Ltd (2000) 170 ALR 42 at 46. 130. See [19-12]–[19-16]. 131. See [22-29]. 132. See [19-11]–[19-17].
[page 506]
Chapter 23
Undue Influence [23-01] Influence and ‘undue influence’. It is common in the negotiation of a contract for one party to seek to persuade the other to make the contract. Such ‘influence’ without more does not prevent the contract from being fully enforceable. But some situations of influence have long been regarded as ‘undue’ and liable to be set aside by the court. Moreover, once it is proved that the parties stood in a ‘relationship of influence’, undue influence is presumed, though the presumption is rebuttable by evidence.1 The doctrine of undue influence is equitable in origin. It is broader than the common law’s concern with the reality and motive for contractual assent.2 Equity, true to its origins, had regard to the conscience of the party seeking to enforce a contract, with a view to ensuring that a position of influence should not be ‘abused’, and that confidence ‘reposed’ should not be ‘betrayed’.3 Now that common law and equity have been fused, at least in their administration, it is a little anachronistic to speak in terms of an ‘equitable doctrine’ of undue influence. However, in determining its scope it is crucial to bear in mind its origins, and the concern for the ‘conscience’ of the party who is claimed to have exercised undue influence. Although the brief description above refers to contracts, the concept of undue influence is not limited to such transactions. It extends to transactions by way of contract, gift or otherwise.4 Thus, while the leading case of Allcard v Skinner5 concerned a gift (from a member of a religious sisterhood to the lady superior of the sisterhood and in trust for it) the principles enunciated apply equally to a contract procured by undue influence. Accordingly, it is appropriate, even in a discussion of contractual undue influence, to rely on cases on transactions such as gifts. Although the mere presence of consideration cannot, in a system concerned with justice, be allowed to exclude the equitable jurisdiction, lack or inadequacy of consideration has characterised many of the cases. [23-02] Remedies for undue influence. Where a contract is affected by undue
influence, the party influenced may approach the court for an order setting aside the contract.6 Therefore, the remedy for undue influence is an order for rescission with consequential adjustments. The essence of the [page 507] consequential relief is restitutio in integrum, that is, orders for restitution in favour of both parties.7 Although the relief is equitable in origin, it gives effect to the principle of unjust enrichment.8 Undue influence is neither a tort nor a breach of contract, and does not per se give rise to a claim for damages in contract or tort.9 However, undue influence may in some cases be associated with tortious conduct,10 or conduct constituting the breach of a statutory prohibition.11 In these cases damages in tort or under statute may be available. Relief for undue influence may include equitable compensation12 or an account of profits if a fiduciary relationship has been breached, or as an incident of equitable relief when having the contract set aside. For example, in O’Sullivan v Management Agency and Music Ltd13 the English Court of Appeal, in setting aside contracts affected by undue influence, awarded an account of the profits that had been made from the contracts. This was, however, subject to a just allowance of ‘reasonable remuneration’ for the work which the defendants did under the contracts, to the benefit of the plaintiff. These orders were necessary to do what was ‘practically just as between the parties’14 in setting aside the contracts.
Concerns and Categories of Undue Influence [23-03] Concerns of undue influence. The name ‘undue influence’ given to the equitable doctrine suggests a concern with: the precise causal relation between the influence and the decision to contract; and a requirement that the influence should warrant the epithet ‘undue’. But the former concern has not characterised the cases and the reason is not far to seek. Generally, it is of the essence that ‘undue influence’ arises from an
antecedent relationship between the parties. This is ‘such a relation that while it continues, confidence is necessarily reposed by one, and the influence which naturally grows out of that confidence is possessed by the other’.15 Once some influence so arising is found to have existed, a court will not be careful to protect the person who exercised it by an inquiry into its effectuality in relation to the particular contract. [page 508] The justification for the presumption in both the familiar classes of relationship,16 as well as in the special fiduciary relationships noted later,17 is ‘to prevent victimisation by influence over the mind of another in circumstances where proof of the exercise of such influence may be impossible’.18 More generally, the justification is to guard against one party taking advantage of a superior position. [23-04] Categories of undue influence. In Allcard v Skinner19 Cotton LJ classified the undue influence cases as instances of ‘actual’ or ‘presumed’ undue influence in the following terms:20 First, where the court has been satisfied that the gift was the result of influence expressly used by the donee for the purpose; second, where the relations between the donor and donee have at or shortly before the execution of the gift been such as to raise a presumption that the donee had influence over the donor. In such a case the court sets aside the voluntary gift, unless it is proved that in fact the gift was the spontaneous act of the donor acting under circumstances which enabled him to exercise an independent will and which justifies the court in holding that the gift was the result of a free exercise of the donor’s will. The first class of cases may be considered as depending on the principle that no one shall be allowed to retain any benefit arising from his own fraud or wrongful act. In the second class of cases the court interferes, not on the ground that any wrongful act has in fact been committed by the donee, but on the ground of public policy, and to prevent the relations which existed between the parties and the influence arising therefrom being abused.
The duality of this treatment of the topic, according to whether undue influence (in the present context, on contractual assent) is proved as a fact or is presumed where an antecedent special relationship is shown to have existed between the parties, is well accepted in Australia.21 Therefore: in the first category of case (actual undue influence) this is the nature and extent of influence which must be proved; and in the second category of case (presumed undue influence) there is a rebuttable presumption that influence of this nature and extent existed. The question is not whether the person seeking relief understood the
transaction. The question is whether it was the result of a free exercise of the will,22 and it is influence, not complete domination, that is necessary.23 We deal first with the second category.24 [page 509] [23-05] Third party situations. Undue influence, like duress,25 may emanate from a third party. For example, in Powell v Powell,26 a voluntary settlement procured by the undue influence of a stepmother/guardian and her solicitor in favour of the former and her two children was set aside in toto. Moreover, the claim to have a contract set aside for undue influence may be available against a third party who enters into a transaction with the influencer. In Bainbrigge v Browne,27 Fry J explained that undue influence operated against the actual influencer, ‘against every volunteer who claimed under him, and also against every person who claimed under him with notice of the equity thereby created, or with notice of the circumstances from which the court infers the equity’ but no further. It follows that a guarantee or security, provided to a creditor for the benefit of a debtor, may be set aside for the undue influence of the debtor. The modern decisions focus on the position of a bank (creditor) which obtains a guarantee or security from the person influenced. There are two types of case.28 First, the creditor may have left the obtaining of the guarantee or security in the hands of the influencer in such a way as to make that person the agent of the creditor.29 Second, more commonly, the creditor may have been put on notice (or known) of facts indicative of impropriety. For example, in Bank of New South Wales v Rogers30 a bank’s awareness of the close relationship between an uncle and his niece amounted to notice of a (presumed) relationship of undue influence, and gave rise to a duty to prove that her actions were voluntary and understood when she transferred most of her property to the bank as security for the uncle’s overdraft. In Yerkey v Jones31 the High Court held that a wife stands in a special position where she acts as a guarantor for her husband’s debt. If she signs a written guarantee, ‘which the creditor accepts without dealing directly with her personally, she has a prima facie right to have it set aside’, if her consent was ‘procured by the husband’ and she did not understand its effect ‘in essential
respects’. In Garcia v National Australia Bank Ltd32 a majority of the High Court (Kirby J dissenting) confirmed the Yerkey principle. Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ explained that Yerkey [page 510] distinguished between situations where the transaction is set aside because of actual undue influence, and situations in which the transaction is set aside because the guarantor does not understand the effect of the document or the nature of the transaction. Of course, the mere fact that a guarantor does not understand the effect of the document or the nature of the transaction would not normally be a sufficient basis for having the transaction set aside. However, according to Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ,33 it may be unconscionable for the creditor to enforce a guarantee by a wife of her husband’s debts in such a case, because of the ‘trust and confidence, in the ordinary sense of those words’ which exists ‘between marriage partners’. The facts were that Ms Garcia signed a guarantee to secure the debts of a company of which she and her husband were directors. There was no explanation of the transaction by the creditor to Ms Garcia, who did not fully understand the nature of the guarantee, and believed that it was a ‘risk proof’ transaction. Moreover, although the company benefited from the giving of the guarantee, Ms Garcia obtained no personal benefit from the transaction. Accordingly, the guarantee was set aside. Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ expressed the principle in these terms:34 [W]hat makes it unconscionable to enforce [the guarantee] is the combination of circumstances that: (a) in fact the surety did not understand the purport and effect of the transaction; (b) the transaction was voluntary (in the sense that the surety obtained no gain from the contract the performance of which was guaranteed); (c) the lender is to be taken to have understood that, as a wife, the surety may repose trust and confidence in her husband in matters of business and therefore to have understood that the husband may not fully and accurately explain the purport and effect of the transaction to his wife; and yet (d) the lender did not itself take steps to explain the transaction to the wife or find out that a stranger had explained it to her.
The practical impact of the case is that it is essential for a creditor who takes the benefit of a guarantee from a wife in respect of her husband’s debts, or the debts of the husband’s company, to ‘take steps to explain the transaction to the wife or find out that a stranger had explained it to her’.35 The creditor may
therefore enforce the transaction against the surety, even though the surety is a volunteer who later claims to have been mistaken, if the creditor explained the transaction sufficiently, or knew that the surety received competent, independent and disinterested advice from a third party.36 Several further points can be made about the application of the Yerkey principle in Garcia and its scope. [page 511] First, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ also stated37 that the principles applied in Yerkey ‘do not depend upon the creditor having, at the time the guarantee is taken, notice of some unconscionable dealing between the husband as borrower and the wife as surety’. Therefore, the creditor need have no notice of impropriety.38 Second, the guarantee related to the company of which both parties to the marriage were directors. Thus, the principle is not limited to guarantees given in respect of a husband’s personal debts. But it seems not to extend to transactions other than guarantees.39 Third, although the principle was expressed in terms of a transaction which is ‘voluntary’, this must be understood in a broader sense than whether contractual consideration is present. Thus, the principle applies unless there is a benefit to the guarantor which is substantial, or at least not negligible. Fourth, the rationale for the principle is not to be found in notions based on the subservience or inferior economic position of women, or their vulnerability to exploitation because of their emotional involvement.40 Fifth, although the High Court expressly left open for later consideration the question whether the principle applies to other relationships,41 it is difficult to see why it would not apply, for example, where a husband is a surety for his wife, or the domestic relationship is between unmarried partners or between same sex partners. Thus, it has been held that the principle is not limited to ‘the most intimate of family relationships’.42
Presumed Undue Influence
General [23-06] Introduction. Within the category of presumed undue influence it is necessary to deal with two sub-categories. In the first, the relationship of the parties belongs to a class in which, according to established practice, undue influence must be presumed. [page 512] In the second, although the relationship does not come within a class in which influence has traditionally been presumed, the factual relationship is such that the court will presume undue influence to be present. [23-07] Relationship between established classes and special relations. In Johnson v Buttress,43 Dixon J considered the relationship between the established familiar classes of relationship and the special relations of influence directed to the particular transaction at issue. He noted that ‘because of the presence of circumstances which might be regarded as presumptive proof of express influence’, factual situations outside the list of established classes ‘but nevertheless importing a special relationship of influence sometimes are treated as if they were not governed by the presumption but depended on an inference of fact’. Dixon J said:44 Further, when the transaction is not one of gift but of purchase or other contract, the matters affecting its validity are necessarily somewhat different. Adequacy of consideration becomes a material question. Instead of inquiring how the subordinate party came to confer a benefit, the court examines the propriety of what wears the appearance of a business dealing. These differences form an additional cause why cases which really illustrate the effect of a special relation of influence in raising a presumption of invalidity are often taken to decide that express influence which is undue should be inferred from the circumstances.
Raising the Presumption [23-08] Established classes of relationship. Common experience has led the courts to accept that certain commonly occurring personal relationships are likely to give rise to influence of the nature and extent mentioned above. Relationships between the following classes of persons have been judicially recognised as falling within this category:
parent (or person in loco parentis)45 and child;46 guardian and ward;47 solicitor and client;48 trustee and beneficiary;49 physician and patient;50 and religious adviser and advisee.51 A notable omission from this list is the relationship of husband and wife.52 [page 513] Questions are raised by the simple proposition that any one of these relationships, irrespective of features peculiar to the particular instance of it, gives rise to the presumption. Must the relationship (such as between solicitor and client) subsist down to the moment of contracting, and if so, with what (if any) ‘characteristics’, ‘strength’ or ‘intensity’? Does a short temporal hiatus between termination of the relationship and the making of the contract signify that the presumption does not arise? Does the presumption arise, to take extreme examples, between a young recently admitted solicitor who is the junior partner in a firm which represents a large public company and that company, or between an aged, ill and poorly educated parent with little business experience and a well-educated and prosperous adult child? [23-09] Scope of the established classes. The answers given to the questions stated above53 may make little difference in the deciding of cases because, in a particular case where the presumption is held to arise, it may be that little evidence is required to rebut it.54 Similarly, in Westmelton (Vic) Pty Ltd v Archer and Shulman55 it was held that the established presumption applied to all instances of the solicitor–client relationship but that the extent of the evidence required to rebut it varied from one case to another. In any case where it is held that the presumption does not arise, there always remains scope for the evidence to show actual undue influence or a special fiduciary relationship on the facts giving rise to a presumption of undue influence.56 In Avon Finance Co Ltd v Bridger57 a majority of the English Court
of Appeal held, without reference to the established converse presumption of undue influence by parent over child, that there was a presumption of undue influence on the facts of the case by a chartered accountant in a good practice over his parents who were aged, in humble circumstances and inexperienced in business, and who had, at his instance, unwittingly executed a second mortgage over their home to secure his borrowing. There is authority for the rejection of the following relationships as giving rise to the presumption: husband and wife;58 dentist and patient;59 master and servant;60 and [page 514] government monopolist supplier and retailer.61 This is not to say, however, that on the facts of particular cases there cannot be either actual undue influence or even a presumption of undue influence62 between the parties to such relationships. The categories of relationship which yield a presumption of undue influence are not closed.63 [23-10] Special relationships giving rise to the presumption. Where the relationship between the parties in a particular case does not fall within one of the familiar classes, the court may be asked to find either that the parties’ antecedent relationship was such that undue influence should, as a matter of law, be presumed unless rebutted, or that there was actual undue influence.64 The reason for the presumption in the established categories, and what must be established by evidence if an ad hoc special relation of influence is to give rise to the same presumption, was explained by Dixon J in Johnson v Buttress:65 [O]ne party occupies or assumes towards another a position naturally involving an ascendancy or influence over that other, or a dependence or trust on his part. One occupying such a position falls under a duty in which fiduciary characteristics may be seen. It is his duty to use his position of influence in the interest of no one but the man who is governed by his judgment, gives him his dependence and entrusts him with his welfare.
It is neither possible nor desirable to attempt to categorise the special relationships which, in particular cases, have been held to give rise to the presumption. However, it is perhaps noteworthy that some have concerned
persons, accustomed to rely on a spouse or other person for business and financial advice, who have, following the death of that person, become dependent on the alleged influencer. In Lloyds Bank Ltd v Bundy66 the defendant was an elderly farmer. His only asset was his farm which had been in his family for generations. His son’s company was in financial difficulty. On 16 September 1966 he guaranteed its bank overdraft up to £1500 and charged his house to the bank as security. He, his son and the company banked at the same bank. On 27 May 1969, he executed a further guarantee for £5000 and a further charge for £6000. This time the assistant branch manager left the documents with the defendant overnight and before he executed them the defendant was advised by a solicitor that £5000 was the furthest extent to which he should commit himself and his home to the company’s business. The house was now charged for £7500. The company’s difficulties continued and in December 1969 a new assistant branch manager told the son that something must be done. The son said his father would help. The new assistant branch manager went to [page 515] see the defendant at his farmhouse. He took further forms of guarantee for £11,000 and a charge for a further £3500 (which would bring the amount secured by charges up to £11,000), both completed and ready for execution. He told the defendant that the bank could continue to support the company only if the documents were executed. The defendant executed them at the farm in the presence of his wife, his son, his son’s wife and the assistant branch manager. The farmhouse was worth about £10,000. In May 1970 a receiver was appointed in respect of the company. The bank, as plaintiff, sought possession to enforce the guarantee and charge but the defendant successfully applied to have both set aside. All three members of the English Court of Appeal favoured this result. The special relationship in question was regarded from the viewpoint of the influencer’s duty to ensure that the other party contracted free from the influence. Sir Eric Sachs (with whose reasons Cairns LJ agreed) said67 that the special relationship tends to arise ‘where someone relies on the guidance or advice of another, where the other is aware of that reliance and where the person upon whom reliance is placed obtains, or may well obtain, a benefit from the transaction or has some other interest in it being
concluded’ and where an element of ‘confidentiality’ is present. More recently, in O’Sullivan v Management Agency and Music Ltd68 the plaintiff, who became a famous singer and songwriter under the name ‘Gilbert O’Sullivan’, placed total confidence in one Mills, who controlled the defendant companies, and trusted him to look after his interests. O’Sullivan lived in a cottage in the grounds of Mills’s house and was given £10 per week ‘pocket money’. Subsequently, there were changes in the contractual relationships and, on Mills’s advice, O’Sullivan signed various agreements without reading them or taking independent advice. The English Court of Appeal held that the close confidential relation between Mills and O’Sullivan gave rise to a presumption of undue influence in relation to the transactions.
Rebutting the Presumption [23-11] Onus. Clearly, the onus of rebutting (displacing) the presumption of undue influence rests on the party supporting the transaction. It must be established that the transaction ‘was the result of a free exercise of the … will’.69 If the onus is not discharged, the transaction is voidable. A common way of attempting to rebut the presumption is by the tender of evidence that the person said to have been influenced received competent independent advice and, in particular, advice from a duly qualified legal practitioner employed independently of the other contracting party. Independent advice is not, however, essential as a matter of law.70 [page 516] Moreover, the mere giving of some such advice is not necessarily sufficient.71 [23-12] Transaction need not be disadvantageous. Since what is required is evidence displacing the presumption, the strength of the evidence required will vary according to the strength of the presumption. So, where the transaction is a gift or disposition for inadequate consideration by an illiterate or weakminded person of all or virtually all of that person’s property, the presumption is more difficult to rebut than where a person not subject to personal disabilities has entered into an agreement for full value extending to only an insubstantial part of his or her property.72
But the question arises whether the transaction must be disadvantageous to the party seeking relief. In Blomley v Ryan,73 an ‘unconscionable bargain’ case, Fullagar J said:74 It does not appear to be essential in all cases that the party at a disadvantage should suffer loss or detriment by the bargain … But inadequacy of consideration, while never of itself a ground for resisting enforcement, will often be a specially important element in cases of this type. It may be important in either or both of two ways — firstly as supporting the inference that a position of disadvantage existed, and secondly as tending to show that an unfair use was made of the occasion.
It was on account of public policy directed against the risk of abuse of influence, not disadvantage actually suffered, that equity relieved.75 Accordingly, the presumption of undue influence is not displaced merely by proof that the transaction was advantageous. And it is not essential to relief on the ground of undue influence that the contract was disadvantageous to the person who has the benefit of the presumption. However, consistently with these propositions the presumption will not arise in cases where the transaction is ‘reasonably accounted for on the ground of friendship, relationship, charity, or other ordinary motives’.76
Actual Undue Influence [23-13] Actual undue influence distinct from presumptions. There is a thin dividing line between actual undue influence and special relationships which give rise to a presumption of undue influence. In each case the onus of proof rests on the person setting up the undue influence. [page 517] Typically, it will be argued that a finding of undue influence is, on the facts, supported on both bases. In the case of a special relationship of influence or duty of fiduciary care, the emphasis is on the antecedent relationship from which the court will be asked to infer that undue influence continued down to the time of contract. On the other hand, in the case of actual undue influence without the benefit of any presumption, the evidence must establish the actual influence on the mind at the time of contract. Inevitably the latter will involve evidence of the genesis of the influence, and the former will usually involve some evidence of actual influence.
[23-14] Adequacy or inadequacy of consideration. Commonly, where undue influence is relieved against, the weaker party has received no consideration or inadequate consideration. This may explain the sense of grievance, and will also be relevant to issues of opportunity to influence, actual influence and rebuttal of the presumption of undue influence. The presence of consideration will require the court to examine the propriety of what wears the appearance of a business dealing.77 However, as we have seen,78 the absence or inadequacy of consideration is not essential to the availability of relief.
Undue Influence and Related Concepts [23-15] Undue influence and non est factum. Non est factum79 is a plea ‘that the mind of the signer did not accompany the signature’.80 It is concerned with signatures, the nature and effect of the document signed and the state of mind and conduct of the signer at the time in relation to the document. The focus of attention is not the other party, although any role played in procuring the signature and/or in the signer’s lack of understanding of the document will be relevant, for example, to the issue of the signer’s negligence. By contrast, in undue influence the relationship between the contracting parties and the conduct of the alleged influencer are essential matters. The effect of the non est factum defence, if successful, is that the document is void ab initio. By contrast, undue influence is relevant to oral and to written contracts, and such influence renders a contract not void but liable to be set aside under equitable principles. [23-16] Undue influence, unconscionable conduct and duress. Since both are species of equitable fraud,81 undue influence may be a form of unconscionable conduct by the person seeking to retain the benefit of a transaction and to resist equitable intervention. But the expression [page 518] ‘unconscionable conduct’ is sometimes used to designate not merely a common characteristic of equitable grounds of relief, but that more specific class of case discussed in Chapter 24 where the reason for setting aside the transaction is not
the existence of undue influence, but the unconscionable nature of the transaction or the conduct of one party to the transaction. Intervention is justified in such cases because the contract is due to the combination of the ‘disadvantageous position’ in which the party seeking relief is placed and the fact that the other party ‘unconscientiously [takes] advantage of that position’.82 And the common law concept of duress83 may operate in situations where undue influence does not. In Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v Amadio84 Deane J expressed the difference between the concepts in this way:85 Undue influence, like common law duress, looks to the quality of the consent or assent of the weaker party … Unconscionable dealing looks to the conduct of the stronger party in attempting to enforce, or retain the benefit of, a dealing with a person under a special disability in circumstances where it is not consistent with equity or good conscience that he should do so.
On this basis, the jurisdictions in relation to unconscionable conduct and undue influence are ‘distinct’.86 Moreover, the continued reliance on presumptive relationships in the undue influence context itself implies a significant practical difference between establishing undue influence and proving unconscionable conduct. Although it has been doubted whether there are many cases of undue influence which cannot be brought within the unconscionable conduct concept,87 it seems important to acknowledge the difference in focus emphasised by Deane J.88 On the other hand, notwithstanding Deane J’s statement that undue influence is like common law duress, because it looks to the ‘quality of the consent or assent of the weaker party’, it is important to acknowledge that undue influence differs from duress because it is no defence to show that the plaintiff’s decision to contract was made freely.89 1.
See generally [23-06]–[23-12].
2.
See [22-01].
3.
Smith v Kay (1859) 7 HLC 750 at 779; 11 ER 299 at 311.
4.
For a recent illustration see Louth v Diprose (1992) 175 CLR 621; 110 ALR 1.
5.
(1887) 36 Ch D 145.
6.
The defences discussed [18-39]–[18-62] apply.
7.
The principles stated [18-43]–[18-46], [38-36] apply.
8.
See generally Chapter 38.
9.
It has been held in Canada that if rescission is no longer an appropriate remedy, damages may be awarded in respect of a disadvantageous contract induced by undue influence. See Treadwell v Martin (1977) 13 NBR (2d) 137.
10.
Cf [22-29] (duress).
11.
See generally Chapter 19.
12.
See J D Heydon, ‘Equitable Compensation for Undue Influence’ (1997) 113 LQR 8.
13.
[1985] QB 428 (see [23-10]). See also Vadasz v Pioneer Concrete (SA) Pty Ltd (1995) 184 CLR 102 at 112–13; 130 ALR 570.
14.
[1985] QB 428 at 466 per Fox LJ. Compare the unusual application in Cheese v Thomas [1994] 1 WLR 129 (see M Chen-Wishart (1994) 110 LQR 173; Martin Dixon [1994] CLJ 232; John Mee [1994] LMCLQ 330). See generally Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1437, 1737.
15.
Tate v Williamson (1866) LR 2 Ch App 55 at 61.
16.
See [23-08].
17.
See [23-10].
18.
Re Craig deceased; Meneces v Middleton [1971] Ch 95 at 104.
19.
(1887) 36 Ch D 145.
20.
(1887) 36 Ch D 145 at 171.
21.
See, eg Johnson v Buttress (1936) 56 CLR 113 at 119, 134; Louth v Diprose (1992) 175 CLR 621.
22.
Adenan v Buise [1984] WAR 61 (approved Bridgewater v Leahy (1998) 194 CLR 457 at 477; 158 ALR 66).
23.
Tufton v Sperni [1952] 2 TLR 516 at 519–25. Suggestions in National Westminster Bank Plc v Morgan [1985] 1 AC 686 at 706–7 of domination as an essential ingredient are not supported by Australian authority.
24.
See [23-06]–[23-12].
25.
See [22-24]. See also [18-28] (fraud by agent).
26.
[1900] 1 Ch 243. Contrast Wright v Carter [1903] 1 Ch 27.
27.
(1881) 18 Ch D 188 at 197. See also Barclays Bank Plc v Boulter [1999] 1 WLR 1919 at 1925 (onus of proof).
28.
See generally N Y Chin, ‘Undue Influence and Third Parties’ (1992) 5 JCL 108. The reasoning in the cases is applicable also to cases of misrepresentation and duress: Barclays Bank Plc v O’Brien [1994] 1 AC 180.
29.
See Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, para 15-150.
30.
(1941) 65 CLR 42. See also Barclays Bank Plc v O’Brien [1994] 1 AC 180 (see Martin Dixon [1994] CLJ 21; John Mee [1995] CLJ 330); CIBC Mortgages Plc v Pitt [1994] 1 AC 200 (see J R F Lehane (1994) 110 LQR 167; A G J Berg [1994] LMCLQ 34); Tresize v National Australia Bank Ltd (1994) 122 ALR 185 at 188 (cf at 197–8).
31.
(1939) 63 CLR 649 at 683. See John Gava, ‘Another Study in Judging: Sir Owen Dixon and Yerkey v Jones’ (2010) 26 JCL 248.
32.
(1998) 194 CLR 395; 155 ALR 614 (see Andrew Phang and Hans Tjio (1999) 14 JCL 72; Robyn Baxendale (1999) 21 Syd LR 313); Simon Gardner (1999) 115 LQR 1.
33.
See (1998) 194 CLR 395 at 404.
34.
See (1998) 194 CLR 395 at 409.
35.
See (1998) 194 CLR 395 at 409 per Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ.
36.
See (1998) 194 CLR 395 at 411 (approving Yerkey v Jones (1939) 63 CLR 649 at 686). See also Westpac Banking Corp v Paterson (2001) 187 ALR 168 at 175. Cf Royal Bank of Scotland Plc v Etridge (No 2) [2002] 2 AC 773 at 798.
37.
(1998) 194 CLR 395 at 409. See also at 409. English law takes a different approach. See Barclays Bank Plc v O’Brien [1994] 1 AC 180 at 195 (see J R F Lehane (1994) 110 LQR 167).
38.
Analysis based on notice may be required in ordering the priority of competing interests in property. See Garcia v National Australia Bank Ltd (1998) 194 CLR 395 at 411.
39.
See Narain v Euroasia (Pacific) Pty Ltd (2009) 26 VR 387 at 396; [2009] VSCA 290 at [43].
40.
See (1998) 194 CLR 395 at 404 (save to the extent that a case may be concerned with actual undue influence).
41.
See (1998) 194 CLR 395 at 404. But there must be something to put the creditor on notice. See Kranz v National Australia Bank Ltd (2003) 8 VR 310 at 322, 327 (brother and brother-in-law). See also Westpac Banking Corp v Paterson (2001) 187 ALR 168 at 174. Cf Royal Bank of Scotland Plc v Etridge (No 2) [2002] 2 AC 773 at 804, 812–13.
42.
Kranz v National Australia Bank Ltd (2003) 8 VR 310 at 320 per Charles JA (with whom Winneke P and Eames JA agreed).
43.
(1936) 56 CLR 113.
44.
(1936) 56 CLR 113 at 135–6.
45.
Bank of New South Wales v Rogers (1941) 65 CLR 42 at 52.
46.
See, eg Bainbrigge v Browne (1881) 18 Ch D 188 at 196; London and Westminster Loan and Discount Co Ltd v Bilton (1911) 27 TLR 184.
47.
See, eg Powell v Powell [1900] 1 Ch 243.
48.
See, eg Re P’s Bill of Costs (1982) 45 ALR 513 at 521–5; Westmelton (Vic) Pty Ltd v Archer and Shulman [1982] VR 305.
49.
See, eg Wheeler v Sargeant (1893) 69 LT 181.
50.
See, eg Dent v Bennett (1839) 4 My & Cr 269; 41 ER 105; Williams v Johnson [1937] 4 All ER 34.
51.
See, eg Allcard v Skinner (1887) 36 Ch D 145.
52.
See, eg Colonial Bank of Australasia v Kerr (1889) 15 VLR 314; Yerkey v Jones (1939) 63 CLR 649. See further [23-09].
53.
See [23-08].
54.
See [23-05].
55.
[1982] VR 305.
56.
See [23-10].
57.
(1979) [1985] 2 All ER 281.
58.
See [23-08]. See, however, [23-05] (position where wife is guarantor of husband’s debts).
59.
Brooks v Alca (1976) 60 DLR (3d) 577.
60.
Mathew v Bobbins [1980] EG Dig 421 (see (1980) 54 ALJ 744).
61.
Eric Gnapp Ltd v Petroleum Board [1949] 1 All ER 980.
62.
See [23-04].
63.
Allcard v Skinner (1887) 36 Ch D 145 at 158; Johnson v Buttress (1936) 56 CLR 113 at 119; Louth v Diprose (1992) 175 CLR 621 at 628.
64.
See Johnson v Buttress (1936) 56 CLR 113 at 119, 134; Re Brocklehurst deceased; Hall v Roberts [1978] Ch 14.
65.
(1936) 56 CLR 113 at 134–5. See also Union Fidelity Trustee Co v Gibson [1971] VR 573 and further [23-12].
66.
[1975] 1 QB 326.
67.
[1975] 1 QB 326 at 341.
68.
[1985] QB 428.
69.
Allcard v Skinner (1887) 36 Ch D 145 at 171 per Cotton LJ. Cf Johnson v Buttress (1936) 56 CLR 113 at 120, 138, 143.
70.
Inche Noriah v Shaik Allie Bin Omar [1929] AC 127; Re P’s Bill of Costs (1982) 45 ALR 513.
71.
Powell v Powell [1900] 1 Ch 243; Inche Noriah v Shaik Allie Bin Omar [1929] AC 127; Westmelton (Vic) Pty Ltd v Archer and Shulman [1982] VR 305.
72.
See Johnson v Buttress (1936) 56 CLR 113 at 120.
73.
(1956) 99 CLR 362.
74.
(1956) 99 CLR 362 at 405. See also Tate v Williamson (1866) LR 2 Ch App 55 at 66. But cf Fry v Lane (1888) 40 Ch D 312.
75.
Allcard v Skinner (1887) 36 Ch D 145 at 171. See also Maguire v Makaronis (1997) 188 CLR 449 at 467; 144 ALR 729 (equity to a decree of rescission will be generated by a prior breach of fiduciary duty).
76.
Allcard v Skinner (1887) 36 Ch D 145 at 185 per Lindley LJ. See Royal Bank of Scotland Plc v Etridge (No 2) [2002] 2 AC 773 (explaining National Westminster Bank Plc v Morgan [1985] 1 AC 686 at 704). See K N Scott, ‘Evolving Equity and the Presumption of Undue Influence’ (2002) 18 JCL 236.
77.
See Johnson v Buttress (1936) 56 CLR 113 at 136; Maguire v Makaronis (1997) 188 CLR 449 at 465.
78.
See [23-12].
79.
‘It is not my deed’, see generally [21-12]–[21-20].
80.
Foster v Mackinnon (1869) LR 4 CP 704 at 711.
81.
See [24-01]. And note the relevance of undue influence to the jurisdiction exercised under the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW) (see [24-21]–[24-27]).
82.
Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v Amadio (1983) 151 CLR 447 at 461; 46 ALR 402 per Mason J.
83.
See Chapter 22.
84.
(1983) 151 CLR 447.
85.
(1983) 151 CLR 447 at 474.
86.
Louth v Diprose (1992) 175 CLR 621 at 627. But see Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Karam (2005) 64 NSWLR 149. Contrast David Capper, ‘Undue Influence and Unconscionability: A Rationalisation’ (1998) 114 LQR 479.
87.
See I J Hardingham, ‘Unconscionable Dealing’ in Finn, ed, Essays in Equity, 1985, pp 17–19. See also Anthony Mason, ‘The Place of Equity and Equitable Remedies in the Contemporary Common Law World’ (1994) 110 LQR 238 at 249 (undue influence now in a ‘position of relative unimportance’). Cf J R F Lehane (1994) 110 LQR 167 at 173 (‘conjunction’ with actual undue
influence). 88.
See Peter Birks and Chin Nyuk Yin, ‘On the Nature of Undue Influence’ in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995, p 57. Cf Bridgewater v Leahy (1998) 194 CLR 457 at 478. See also Anne Finlay, ‘Can We See the Chancellor’s Footprint?: Bridgewater v Leahy’ (1999) 14 JCL 265.
89.
See P J Millett, ‘Equity’s Place in the Law of Commerce’ (1998) 114 LQR 214 at 219.
[page 519]
Chapter 24
Unconscionable Conduct and Unfair Terms [24-01] Relevance of unconscionability. In the past 30 years the concept of unconscionability has become a significant theme in the Australian law of contract.1 In nearly every area of the law unconscionability has been treated as having relevance in one way or another. To appreciate its relevance, a number of points may be distinguished: (1) A person may unconscionably seek to depart from a promise, representation or assurance made, but this may have no contractual significance. (2) Unconscionability may be relevant to the decision to contract. That is to say, a contract may be entered into because one party has engaged in unconscionable conduct in order to influence the other to enter into the contract. (3) The terms of a contract may be unconscionable in the sense of being unfair to one of the parties. (4) Enforcement of a contract (or the rights which it creates) may, in particular circumstances, be unconscionable. (5) Unconscionability may be regulated by statute, including as a justification for re-opening a contract. The concept of unconscionability has been referred to in several places in this book. For example, the book discusses: unconscionable departure from non-contractual promises, representations and assurances in the context of estoppel;2 the unconscionable exercise of contractual rights in the context of termination3 and the recovery of sums fixed by the contract;4
[page 520] the operation of an unconscionability concept in relation to the law of mistake.5 The significant feature of other discussions of unconscionability is that the concept does not operate as a separate doctrine. Instead, it is a factor leading to interference with the terms of a bargain not itself procured by unconscionable conduct. For example, where the exercise of a right of termination deprives the other party of an interest in property, the court may exercise a jurisdiction to grant relief against forfeiture if the conduct of the first party is, in the circumstances, unconscionable. However, the particular concern of this chapter is whether, and in what circumstances, a contract may be set aside by the court on the ground that it is an ‘unconscionable contract’. In one sense this is a residual class of case in which there is equitable jurisdiction to relieve from a contract. From a broader — and more accurate — perspective the discussion can be seen as defining the limits of a jurisdiction which courts possess to relieve against fraud in the widest sense. The jurisdiction encompasses misrepresentation, mistake, undue influence and, in limited cases, unconscionable conduct. These do not amount to a general jurisdiction to intervene, based on some indefinable concept of ‘unfairness’.6 Another interesting issue for the future is how unconscionability will develop as more Australian contract cases are considering the notion of ‘good faith’.7 Currently the two concepts are regarded separately. Yet, perhaps as ‘unconscionability’ expands in common law and statutory provisions make reference to ‘good faith’ as a factor in deciding whether there has been unconscionable conduct,8 in the future the distinction may become less apparent.9
Some General Points [24-02] Limits on general law relief against harsh contracts. The courts do not have a general supervisory jurisdiction over the making of contracts and there is no shortage of judicial warning against assuming to the contrary. Thus, Lord Radcliffe, in Bridge v Campbell Discount Co Ltd,10 said: ‘Unconscionable’ must not be taken to be a panacea for adjusting any contract between competent persons when it shows a rough edge to one side or the other, and equity lawyers are, I notice,
sometimes both surprised and discomfited by the plenitude of jurisdiction and the imprecision of rules that are attributed to ‘equity’ by their more enthusiastic colleagues. Even such masters of equity as Lord Eldon and Sir George Jessel, it must be remembered, were highly sceptical of the court’s duty to apply the epithet
[page 521] ‘unconscionable’ or its consequences to contracts made between persons of full age in circumstances that did not fall within the familiar categories of fraud, surprise, accident, etc.
[24-03] Basis of relief. Probably every contract involves some disparity between the parties in terms of bargaining power, needs, means and business prowess. Certainty of contract would be destroyed if courts were to relieve merely because of some such disparity. Also, it would be inconsistent with the philosophy of a free enterprise system to attempt to eliminate all negotiating advantage. Finally, a concern with fine differences between the parties’ respective negotiating positions would give rise to long and costly hearings and great evidentiary difficulties. The history of the topic certainly illustrates the development of a basis for relief which may be described as ‘unconscionability’ or ‘unconscionable conduct’.11 Following the decision of the High Court in Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v Amadio12 and the enactment of legislation prohibiting unconscionable conduct,13 relief on the basis of unconscionability has been sought in the Australian courts far more frequently than was traditionally the case.
Unconscionable Conduct Under the General Law Catching Bargains14 [24-04] Catching bargains with ‘expectants’. Equity has a long established jurisdiction to relieve from transactions on account of equitable fraud.15 Many of the early cases were concerned with catching bargains with ‘expectants’. These were members of the English upper class, often young and certainly not accustomed to possessing and dealing with wealth, who were about to inherit
property or to become entitled to property upon the cessation of an estate or interest vested in someone else. As an illustration of the latter, such a person might be entitled to property which was leased to another and the period of the lease might be about to end so that the right to possession would revert to the person (‘reversioner’) who would then suddenly be entitled to dispose of valuable property.16 [page 522] Catching bargains with expectant heirs and reversioners of young age was the most common class of contract with which equity interfered in the 19th century.17 [24-05] Statutory intervention. As Meagher, Heydon and Leeming observe:18 So tender was the concern of equity that by the mid-nineteenth century the position had been reached that inadequacy of price alone was sufficient ground for setting aside such transactions; there was no necessity to show other badges of fraud usually associated with unconscionable bargains …
The consequent vulnerability of bona fide transactions in which it happened that consideration did not equal value led to legislative intervention in England19 which has been followed in Australia.20 The New South Wales section reads: (1) No acquisition made in good faith, without fraud or unfair dealing, of any reversionary interest in real or personal property for money or money’s worth, shall be liable to be opened or set aside merely on the ground of under value.
In this sub-section ‘reversionary interest’ includes an expectancy or possibility. (2) This section does not affect the jurisdiction of the court to set aside or modify unconscionable bargains.
The section displaces the presumption that arose from inadequacy of consideration in the case of transactions with expectants, leaving them to be treated according to the same principles as other allegedly unconscionable transactions, with inadequacy of consideration as a matter relevant to be regarded. [24-06] Catching bargains with other persons at a disadvantage. An analogous class of case was that of the catching bargain with persons disadvantaged by one, or more often several, of the following: poverty, age, youth, inexperience, illiteracy, ill health, lack of education, eccentricity, isolation. Expectation of wealth was no ingredient of this second class of case. In
Fry v Lane21 Kay J enunciated22 the principle established by the 19th century cases in these terms: The result of the decisions is that where a purchase is made from a poor and ignorant man at a considerable undervalue, the vendor having no independent advice, a court of equity will set aside the transaction.
[page 523] This will be done even in the case of a property in possession, and à fortiori if the interest be reversionary. The circumstances of poverty and ignorance of the vendor, and absence of independent advice, throw upon the purchaser, when the transaction is impeached, the onus of proving … that the purchase was ‘fair, just and reasonable’.
Equity relieved with caution: it often did not award costs in favour of the party granted relief.23 The three factors referred to by Kay J constitute a common manifestation of this, rather than an exhaustive definition of ‘unconscionable transactions’.24 Although Kay J may have described what were, on the authorities, ‘sufficient’ grounds for equitable intervention, he did not make or purport to make a comprehensive statement of the ‘necessary elements’ of such grounds.
Modern Case Law25 [24-07] Variety of circumstances. In Blomley v Ryan26 Fullagar J said:27 The circumstances adversely affecting a party, which may induce a court of equity either to refuse its aid or to set a transaction aside, are of great variety and can hardly be satisfactorily classified. Among them are poverty or need of any kind, sickness, age, sex, infirmity of body or mind, drunkenness, illiteracy or lack of education, lack of assistance or explanation where assistance or explanation is necessary. The common characteristic seems to be that they have the effect of placing one party at a serious disadvantage vis à vis the other. It does not appear to be essential in all cases that the party at a disadvantage should suffer loss or detriment by the bargain … But inadequacy of consideration, while never of itself a ground for resisting enforcement, will often be a specially important element in cases of this type. It may be important in either or both of two ways — firstly as supporting the inference that a position of disadvantage existed, and secondly as tending to show that an unfair use was made of the occasion.
In Blomley v Ryan28 the court upheld the trial judge’s rescission of a contract for the sale of a grazing property at the instance of the vendor, an old and uneducated man, mentally and physically weak from the effects of intoxication and lacking in independent advice.
McTiernan J described the species of equitable fraud referred to by Lord Hardwicke in Earl of Chesterfield v Janssen29 as ‘getting bargains by taking [page 524] surreptitious advantage of persons unable to judge for themselves by reason of weakness, necessity or ignorance’ and thought that the word ‘surreptitious’ implied that the bargain was ‘snatched’.30 And Kitto J, who dissented on the facts, thought that the principle applied:31 … whenever one party to a transaction is at a special disadvantage in dealing with the other party because illness, ignorance, inexperience, impaired faculties, financial need or other circumstances affect his ability to conserve his own interests, and the other party unconscientiously takes advantage of the opportunity thus placed in his hands.
Kitto J described the ‘essence’ of the ground as ‘unconscientiousness on the part of the party seeking to enforce the contract’ which, in the instant case, would necessitate proof that the defendant was in such a debilitated condition that there was not ‘a reasonable degree of equality between the contracting parties’32 and that this was sufficiently clear to the plaintiff’s representatives to make it unfair for them to take up his decision to sell. According to Kitto J, if these two matters were established, the burden of proving ‘that the transaction was nevertheless fair’33 would rest on the plaintiff. [24-08] The search for a guiding principle. Three elements have traditionally been present before equity would relieve against a contract on the ground that it was unconscionable: First, one party has been at a serious disadvantage to the other of which unfair advantage might be taken. Second, exploitation of this weakness was in a morally culpable manner. Third, a transaction resulted which is overreaching and oppressive rather than merely hard or improvident.34 Is it possible to find a single guiding principle or controlling factor in cases of unconscionability? One suggestion is a general doctrine based on inequality of bargaining power. Inequality of bargaining power is present in instances of duress, undue influence and the two classes of unconscionable transactions just mentioned. [24-09] Suggestions of inequality of bargaining power as basis. For a time the
English cases suggested the view that inequality of bargaining power is an independent ground for relief. In Lloyds Bank Ltd v Bundy,35 the defendant successfully applied to have a guarantee contract and charge over his property set aside. The majority of Cairns LJ and Sir Eric Sachs so decided on the ground that in having the defendant execute the documents without independent advice, the bank had been in breach of a ‘duty of fiduciary care’ owed to the defendant.36 However, Lord Denning MR [page 525] espoused a broader principle. Having reviewed the categories of situation in which a contracting party has been relieved from his or her bargain he concluded that a characteristic of them all was inequality of bargaining power. He deduced inequality of bargaining power as the essential and general ground for relief. By virtue of this ‘single thread’ of ‘inequality of bargaining power’ his Lordship said:37 English law gives relief to one who, without independent advice, enters into a contract upon terms which are very unfair or transfers property for a consideration which is grossly inadequate, when his bargaining power is grievously impaired by reason of his own needs or desires, or by his own ignorance or infirmity, coupled with undue influences or pressures brought to bear on him by or for the benefit of the other.
During the 1970s the suggested general doctrine based on inequality of bargaining power was discussed in a number of English cases. And it seemed at one time that it might take hold.38 However, in National Westminster Bank Plc v Morgan39 the House of Lords rejected the general principle developed by Lord Denning,40 and the case also confined unconscionability to the recognised classes of case referred to earlier.41 It does not suffice that the parties were of unequal bargaining power and that the stronger does not show that the contract was fair; rather, the stronger party’s conduct must (at least) be shown to be unconscionable or oppressive.42 Inequality is relevant to the reasonableness of contractual promises in restraint of trade.43 The availability of undue influence, particularly the presumption of undue influence arising from an ad hoc duty of fiduciary care,44 and the two classes of ‘unconscionable bargain’ noted above,45 have reduced the need for a general law principle of inequality of bargaining power. So has the legislation discussed below.46 However, such legislation commonly adopts inequality of bargaining power as one matter relevant to the exercise of the discretion to grant
relief. [24-10] The Amadio decision. The equitable jurisdiction to relieve against transactions unconscionably obtained from persons at a disadvantage47 has long been exercised by Australian courts.48 In Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v Amadio,49 Amadio Builders (the company) had an overdraft account with the Commercial Bank of Australia [page 526] Ltd (the bank). Vincenzo Amadio was the managing director of the company and met regularly with the bank’s branch manager. It was clear to the manager that the company was insolvent, but he agreed to assist Vincenzo in maintaining an apparent prosperity, for example, by the selective dishonour of the company’s cheques. In March the account was so overdrawn that the bank closed it. The account was re-opened on condition that the overdraft was secured by a mortgage on property owned by Vincenzo’s parents (the Amadios). The deed of mortgage was executed at their home in the presence of the branch manager. They were quite old and had only a limited knowledge of written English. The deed secured, by way of guarantee, all sums which might be owed by the company to the bank. There was no limit as to time or amount, notwithstanding that, prior to their signing the deed, Vincenzo had informed them that the guarantee would be for six months and have an upper limit of $50,000. The branch manager did in fact inform them that it was not limited to a six-month period, but they received no independent advice at all. When the company went into liquidation it owed the bank nearly $240,000. The bank demanded payment from the Amadios who sued in the Supreme Court of South Australia for a release from the deed. The bank counter-claimed for a declaration of validity and an order for payment. Wells J dismissed the claim and gave judgment for the bank on the counter-claim. An appeal to the Full Court was successful and the bank appealed to the High Court. That court dismissed the appeal. Gibbs CJ, who decided in favour of the Amadios on the ground of misrepresentation, said:50 … a transaction will be unconscientious within the meaning of the relevant equitable principles only if the party seeking to enforce the transaction has taken unfair advantage of his own superior bargaining power, or of the position of disadvantage in which the other party was placed.
He would have held that the bank did not take unfair advantage of any
disabilities of the parents. In one of only three references to Lloyds Bank Ltd v Bundy51 in the judgments, Gibbs CJ noted52 that Lord Denning had observed53 that the mere fact that contracting parties did not meet on equal terms did not call for the intervention of equity. Mason J referred54 to ‘an underlying general principle which may be invoked whenever one party by reason of some condition of [sic — or] circumstance is placed at a special disadvantage vis à vis another and unfair or unconscientious advantage is then taken of the opportunity thereby created’ and emphasised that the disabling condition or circumstance must [page 527] ‘seriously’ affect the innocent party’s ability to judge his or her own best interests and that the other party must know of that condition or circumstance and its effect. And according to Mason J, the equity may extend further:55 [I]f A having actual knowledge that B occupies a situation of special disadvantage in relation to an intended transaction, so that B cannot make a judgment as to what is in his own interests, takes unfair advantage of his (A’s) superior bargaining power or position by entering into that transaction, his conduct in so doing is unconscionable. And if, instead of having actual knowledge of that situation, A is aware of the possibility that that situation may exist or is aware of facts that would raise that possibility in the mind of any reasonable person, the result will be the same.
Deane J, with whose reasons and conclusion Wilson J agreed, said:56 The jurisdiction is long established as extending generally to circumstances in which (i) a party to a transaction was under a special disability in dealing with the other party with the consequence that there was an absence of any reasonable degree of equality between them and (ii) that disability was sufficiently evident to the stronger party to make it prima facie unfair or ‘unconscientious’ that he procure, or accept, the weaker party’s assent to the impugned transaction in the circumstances in which he procured or accepted it. Where such circumstances are shown to have existed, an onus is cast upon the stronger party to show that the transaction was fair, just and reasonable …
He compared the relative positions of the bank and the Amadios and concluded that the Amadios’ ‘weakness’ constituted a ‘special disability’ in their dealing with the bank of the type required to attract the equitable principles governing relief against unconscionable dealing. In his view this was sufficiently evident to the bank through its branch manager to make it ‘unconscientious’ for the bank to procure the execution of the deed which had occurred. It was because the bank had not discharged the onus thus lying upon it of showing ‘that the transaction was … in point of fact fair, just and equitable’57 that the appeal had to fail.
Dawson J dissented on the basis that the trial judge’s findings did not support a conclusion that the parents ‘were in any position of disadvantage which was used by the bank for its benefit’.58 [24-11] ‘Special disadvantage’. When considering the concept of ‘special disadvantage’ courts look at whether the weaker party was able to make a judgment in his or her own best interests.59 The circumstances in which a situation of special disadvantage will arise may be ‘matters arising … from the context and circumstances surrounding the transaction’.60 [page 528] Some of the subsequent cases emphasise the idea of the weaker party being unable to make a judgment in his or her own best interests.61 Thus, for example, a mortgage and guarantee were set aside as unconscionable where a widow in her late 40s, with more than average experience in land dealings, was taken advantage of by a man to whom she was attracted and who misled her about his property affairs.62 It was said that the special disability depended on ‘an objective comparison of the relative positions of the respective parties and of their ability to protect their own interests’.63 In the circumstances, she was held to be under a relevant disadvantage in relation to the man’s bank, with the disparity in knowledge between herself and the bank as to the man’s intentions concerning the funds loaned by the bank preventing her making a judgment in her own best interests concerning the provision of security for the loan.64 [24-12] Application of the concept. The concept of unconscionability as a basis for relief may be established by evidence of, inter alia, inequality of bargaining power in particular cases. But unconscionability is a concept better described than defined.65 It is wrong to limit equity’s jurisdiction by supposing any of the following: that equitable fraud can be specifically defined; that classes of case in which it has been found to exist are mutually exclusive; that an element such as inadequacy of consideration or disadvantage resulting from a transaction which influenced a court to relieve in a particular case is always essential; or that any one element, such as the absence of independent advice, which supported a refusal of relief in a particular case, will always be decisive.66
Decisions will always depend on the circumstances of the particular case and will necessarily involve an element of impression. On one view unconscionability should be seen as a component of the general jurisdiction of the courts to grant relief in cases of equitable fraud, and to see unconscionable conduct as a circumstance which may attract the exercise of that jurisdiction.67 [page 529] An important factor in many cases of an allegedly unconscionable transaction is whether or not the disadvantaged party received independent advice. The provision of such advice may help to establish that the weaker party’s position of disadvantage was in the circumstances overcome, or that the stronger party did not take unconscientious advantage of that position. Although cases where a contract is set aside on the ground of unconscionability will frequently involve a significant inadequacy of consideration or disadvantageous terms of contract, this is not essential.68 If a person in a situation of disadvantage is pushed to sell a home, the fact that the market (or greater) price is obtained does not prevent the application of the doctrine to a contract which would not have been entered into had unconscionable advantage not been taken of that person’s disability. Many cases have involved, as did Commercial Bank of Australia v Amadio69 itself, persons giving a guarantee (often secured by a mortgage over the family home) of a loan made to a business owned by a spouse, relative or friend. Although there is in such cases sufficient consideration to make the contract between the lender and the guarantor binding,70 the fact that the guarantor receives no personal benefit from the transaction is an important factor. [24-13] Remedy of rescission. Where a contract is found to be unconscionable, the normal remedy is an order for rescission. A court, in granting this remedy, has some flexibility in setting the contract aside only in part or in making its order subject to conditions to avoid injustice to the party against whom the order is made.71 However, the limits of this power have not been explored. The general restrictions on orders setting aside contracts apply. These include the requirement of substantial restitution.72 Affirmation or delay in seeking relief may be a bar to relief being ordered.73 A feature of the statutory provisions discussed below is the greater flexibility given to the courts in framing orders to meet the needs of the particular case.74
Affirmation or delay in seeking relief is not of itself a bar to relief being ordered.75 [24-14] The future of unconscionability in Australia. The High Court’s decision in Commercial Bank of Australia v Amadio76 was important in restating the principles relating to unconscionable contracts. It was also made clear that actual knowledge by the superior party of the disability of the other is not essential. Traditionally, the jurisdiction was77 exercised only in cases of quite extreme disadvantage and unfairness. One view is that [page 530] Amadio would probably have been decided differently on the unconscionability point 30 years previously.78 Indeed, since Amadio’s case Australian courts have perhaps become more willing to set aside contracts on the ground of unconscionability than before.79 Defences based on Amadio are now regularly raised and are sometimes successful.80 This expansion of the jurisdiction has no doubt been at least partly influenced (as was probably Amadio’s case itself) by recent statutory developments. The High Court has rejected the suggestion that a wife’s special equity based on the principle of Yerkey v Jones81 could come within the ‘special disability’ principle of Amadio.82
Unconscionable Conduct under Statute [24-15] Introduction. The discussion below deals with the prohibitions in the Australian Consumer Law83 relating to: unconscionable conduct within the meaning of the unwritten law — s 20; and unconscionable conduct in connection with goods or services — ss 21, 22. These two prohibitions replace the three classes of prohibited conduct stated in the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth): (1) unconscionable conduct, within the meaning of the unwritten law — s 51AA; (2) unconscionable conduct in connection with the supply or possible supply of
goods or services of a kind ordinarily acquired for personal, domestic or household use or consumption — s 51AB; and (3) unconscionable conduct in certain business transactions — s 51AC. There are two issues: the circumstances under which relief may be granted; and the relief which is available. [page 531] [24-16] Unwritten law. Section 20 of the Australian Consumer Law states:84 (1) A person must not, in trade or commerce, engage in conduct that is unconscionable, within the meaning of the unwritten law from time to time. (2) This section does not apply to conduct that is prohibited by section 21 or 22. The unwritten law, from time to time, of the States and Territories is the common law of Australia.85 Section 20(1) therefore enables courts to apply the rules of the general law as to unconscionable conduct to conduct generally, when engaged in by a person in trade or commerce.86 This provision is significant because the courts can use the range of remedial orders available under the Australian Consumer Law, which are wider in scope than those under the general law.87 The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission may also take action in appropriate cases. In Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v C G Berbatis Holdings Pty Ltd,88 the High Court accepted that the words ‘unconscionable within the meaning of the unwritten law’ incorporate the principles applied in Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v Amadio.89 That is a relatively narrow doctrine of unconscionable conduct in relation to contracts. Even so, it is possible that it extends further and refers to other equitable doctrines (such as equitable estoppel and relief against forfeiture) where unconscionable conduct is an element.90 A pecuniary penalty may be imposed for a contravention of this provision. [24-17] In connection with goods or services. Other prohibitions relating to unconscionable conduct which were formerly stated in ss 51AB and 51AC of the
Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) were adopted by ss 21 and 22 of the Australian Consumer Law. However, those provisions have already been replaced91 by new provisions relating to unconscionable conduct in connection with goods or services. Section 21 prohibits unconscionable conduct ‘in trade or commerce’92 in connection with: the supply or possible supply of goods or services to a person (other than a listed public company); or [page 532] the acquisition or possible acquisition of goods or services from a person (other than a listed public company). A pecuniary penalty may be imposed for a contravention of this provision. Section 22 then sets out the matters the court may ‘have regard to’93 for the purposes of deciding whether s 21 has been contravened. It follows that s 22 does not state a separate prohibition. But there are two prohibitions in s 21. The sections are very long. It is not possible to reproduce the provisions in their entirety. But the following points may be noted. First, the Australian Consumer Law goes out of its way to make two things explicit: (1) that the provisions are not limited by the unwritten law provision (which included the Amadio principle);94 and (2) that the list in s 22 of matters to be considered is not exhaustive. Second, so far as contracts are concerned, unconscionable conduct may be established not only by reference to the negotiation of the contract but also the terms agreed upon. That can be seen not only in the content of the factors referred to in s 22 but also specific provisions in s 21. In particular, s 21(4)(c) states: (4) It is the intention of the Parliament that: … (c) in considering whether conduct to which a contract relates is unconscionable, a court’s consideration of the contract may include consideration of: (i)
the terms of the contract; and
(ii) the manner in which and the extent to which the contract is carried out;
and is not limited to consideration of the circumstances relating to formation of the contract.
Third, s 22(1) and s 22(2) list the same factors from the two perspectives stated in s 21, namely, unconscionable conduct by the supplier of goods or services (s 22(1)) or unconscionable conduct by the acquirer of goods or services (s 22(2)). Fourth, it follows that the list in s 22 ranges over various matters and is very long. Examples in s 22(1) include: (a) the relative strengths of the bargaining positions of the supplier and the customer; and … (d) whether any undue influence or pressure was exerted on, or any unfair tactics were used against, the customer or a person acting on behalf of the customer by the supplier or a person acting on behalf of the supplier in relation to the supply or possible supply of the goods or services; and (e) the amount for which, and the circumstances under which, the customer could have acquired identical or equivalent goods or services from a person other than the supplier; and
[page 533] (f)
the extent to which the supplier’s conduct towards the customer was consistent with the supplier’s conduct in similar transactions between the supplier and other like customers; and
(g) the requirements of any applicable industry code;95 and (h) the extent to which the supplier unreasonably failed to disclose to the customer: (i)
any intended conduct of the supplier that might affect the interests of the customer; and
(ii) any risks to the customer arising from the supplier’s intended conduct (being risks that the supplier should have foreseen would not be apparent to the customer); and … (j)
if there is a contract between the supplier and the customer for the supply of the goods or services: (i)
the extent to which the supplier was willing to negotiate the terms and conditions of the contract with the customer; and
(ii) the terms and conditions of the contract; and (iii) the conduct of the supplier and the customer in complying with the terms and conditions of the contract; and (iv) any conduct that the supplier or the customer engaged in, in connection with their commercial relationship, after they entered into the contract; and … (l)
the extent to which the supplier and the customer acted in good faith.
Fifth, s 21(2) states that the prohibitions in s 21 do not apply to conduct that is engaged in only because the person engaging in the conduct:
(a) institutes legal proceedings in relation to the supply or possible supply, or in relation to the acquisition or possible acquisition; or (b) refers to arbitration a dispute or claim in relation to the supply or possible supply, or in relation to the acquisition or possible acquisition.
Sixth, in deciding whether conduct contravenes s 21, regard may be had to conduct engaged in or ‘circumstances existing’96 before the commencement of the section: s 21(3)(b). There is therefore an element of retrospectivity. But no regard may be had to ‘any circumstances that were not reasonably foreseeable at the time of the alleged contravention’: s 21(3)(a). Seventh, the prohibitions in s 21 of the Australian Consumer Law cannot be relied on by a listed public company.97 This is a very narrow exception. Finally, s 21(4)(b) states that it is the ‘intention of the Parliament’ that s 21 ‘is capable of applying to a system of conduct or pattern of behaviour, whether or not a particular individual is identified as having been disadvantaged by the conduct or behaviour’. This is a new provision, and [page 534] appears to be aimed at abstract control of conduct which is inherently unconscionable. It should also be noted that s 22A states that s 4 of the Australian Consumer Law applies for the purposes of ss 21 and 22 in the same way as it applies for the purposes of other provisions such as the prohibition on misleading or deceptive conduct. Section 4 relates to representations in respect of future matters.98 [24-18] Rights and remedies. The usual context of unconscionability in the general contract setting is the ability of a party to enforce the contract, or the entitlement of the innocent party to an order setting aside the contract. But neither the conduct nor the relief available for contravention of the unconscionable prohibitions in the Australian Consumer Law is limited to contractual situations. Rather, they prohibit a particular kind of conduct in particular contexts, and a person may obtain an injunction to prevent contravention.99 In many cases, the person who seeks relief for contravention of the unconscionable conduct prohibitions will do so as a defence to an action to enforce a contract. But, irrespective of whether a contract is entered into as a
result of contravening conduct: (1) damages may be awarded under s 236 of the Australian Consumer Law;100 and (2) other orders may be sought pursuant to ss 237 and 243 of the Australian Consumer Law.101 The remedy of damages is available as of right in respect of loss caused by the conduct. However, the other orders are discretionary. Although conferring no positive right of rescission on a person who enters into a contract as a result of unconscionable conduct, the other orders which may be made include not only compensation but also a declaration that any contract entered into be set aside.102 And, in addition, relief may be sought not only against any person who contravened an unconscionable conduct prohibition, but also against any person ‘involved in’ that contravention.103 [24-19] Application of the prohibitions. The provisions of the Australian Consumer Law relating to unconscionable conduct are substantially different from those included in the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth). In fact, the provisions have evolved considerably through a large number of amendments and revisions.104 It follows that cases discussing the meaning of ‘unconscionable’105 in the expression ‘unconscionable conduct’ need to be treated with some caution. [page 535] Similarly, differences that may have been perceived as between the prohibitions formerly stated in ss 51AB and 51AC are no longer relevant.106 Section 51AC of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) was similar to the present s 21 of the Australian Consumer Law. The cases in which it was held that ‘unconscionable conduct’ requires ‘something clearly unfair or unreasonable’ or action that shows no regard for conscience and imports a ‘pejorative moral judgment’107 may carry some weight in the interpretation of s 21.108 That element reflects the principles stated in Commercial Bank of Australia v Amadio.109 Indeed, a ‘transparent moral dimension’110 has always been regarded as essential to (inherent in) the concept of unconscionable conduct. However, the explicit statements in the Australian Consumer Law that s 21 is not limited by the general law must be kept in mind.
The prohibitions on unconscionable conduct in the Australian Consumer Law have much wider application than the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW). They are not limited to unconscionable contracts. Instead, they speak more generally of unconscionable conduct. For example, they apply to unconscionable promotional conduct as well as to post-contractual conduct (for example, certain enforcement practices).111 In addition, courts exercising jurisdiction to award remedies under the Australian Consumer Law have a flexibility in framing relief more extensive than that enjoyed by courts applying the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW). Sections 21 and 22 of the Australian Consumer Law place somewhat more emphasis on substantive matters than the Contracts Review Act.112 In [page 536] particular, the Contracts Review Act does not expressly refer to the amount of the price payable under the contract.113 Of course, it can also be said that jurisdiction in relation to ‘unconscionable’ conduct is different from jurisdiction in relation to unjust contracts.114 The ‘pejorative moral judgment’ which has traditionally been regarded as inherent in the concept of unconscionable conduct is not essential under the Contracts Review Act.115 However, even if ‘unconscionable’ is narrower than ‘unjust’ — which seems unlikely — unfair terms in ‘consumer contracts’ are reviewable independently of the unconscionable conduct prohibitions under the Australian Consumer Law’s unfair contract terms regime.116
Unjust Contracts Legislation Introduction [24-20] Types of unjust contracts legislation. Legislation providing for relief from unfair contracts falls into two classes: legislation dealing with particular kinds of contracts which have been shown, by experience, to be themselves frequently characterised by harshness, unconscionability and injustice or to contain unfair terms;
legislation which addresses this problem in contracts generally or at least in consumer contracts. Many illustrations could be given of legislation dealing with particular kinds of contracts.117 The most important example is that a court may reopen unjust transactions under the National Credit Code.118 Relief may be given from certain unjust contracts, mortgages or guarantees in respect of the provision of consumer credit.119 The concern is with more general legislation [page 537]
The Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW) [24-21] Generally. Pursuant to a reference from the Minister for Consumer Affairs and Co-operative Societies, Professor John R Peden submitted a Report to that Minister and to the Attorney-General for New South Wales on harsh and unconscionable contracts.120 In reliance on that report the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW) was enacted.121 The preamble to the Act describes it as an ‘Act with respect to judicial review of certain contracts and the grant of relief in respect of harsh, oppressive, unconscionable or unjust contracts’. Generally,122 the Act provides for relief in respect of unjust contracts,123 or contracts containing unjust terms, even if they have been entered into in circumstances which might not justify relief under the general law.124 The Act has been described as ‘revolutionary legislation whose evident purpose is to overcome the common law’s failure to provide a comprehensive doctrinal framework to deal with … unjust contracts’.125 [24-22] Unjust contracts and consumers. The Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW) applies to contracts generally in the sense that, unlike the legislation referred to above,126 the subject matter of the contract is irrelevant. However, generally, ‘commercial’ parties to a contract may not be granted relief under its provisions. Sections 4(2), 5 and 6 of the Act define its scope. There is a distinction between persons bound by the Act and persons entitled to relief. Although the Act binds the Crown,127 the Crown may not be granted relief under the Act.128 Nor is a corporation129 entitled to relief. It follows that the small family
company may not be granted relief whereas the wealthy individual may be!130 Section 6(2) provides for a ‘business contracts’ exception: A person may not be granted relief under this Act in relation to a contract so far as the contract was entered into in the course of or for the purpose of a trade, business or profession carried on by the person or proposed to be carried on by the person, other than a farming undertaking (including, but not limited to, an agricultural, pastoral, horticultural, orcharding or viticultural undertaking) carried on by the person or proposed to be carried on by the person wholly or principally in New South Wales.
[page 538] Section 6(2) must be ‘looked at as a matter of substance’.131 It refers to a contract entered into (a) ‘in the course of’ or (b) ‘for the purpose of’ a trade, business or profession carried on or proposed to be carried on by a person. So, a contract entered into for the purpose of a trade, business or profession carried on by another, such as a guarantee of another’s business debts or liabilities,132 may fall within the Act. Similarly, a borrowing, where the borrower intends to use the amount borrowed to invest in a business conducted by another in which the borrower would acquire an interest,133 is not excepted from the Act’s scope.134 It has been held that where a person sells his or her business the contract of sale is not one ‘in the course of’ or ‘for the purpose of’ that business and that the Act is therefore applicable.135 This rather literal interpretation of s 6(2) has been doubted.136 It seems difficult to reconcile with the apparent policy basis of the provision. [24-23] Section 7. The pivotal provision of the Contracts Review Act is s 7(1): Where the court finds a contract or a provision of a contract to have been unjust in the circumstances relating to the contract at the time it was made, the court may, if it considers it just to do so, and for the purpose of avoiding as far as practicable an unjust consequence or result, do any one or more of the following— (a) It may decide to refuse to enforce any or all of the provisions of the contract; (b) It may make an order declaring the contract void, in whole or in part; (c) It may make an order varying, in whole or in part, any provision of the contract; (d) It may, in relation to a land instrument,137 make an order138 for or with respect to requiring the execution of an instrument that— (i)
varies, or has the effect of varying, the provisions of the land instrument; or
(ii) terminates or otherwise affects, or has the effect of terminating or otherwise affecting, the operation or effect of the land instrument.
This provision does two things:
First, it describes the criterion by which the operation of the Act is activated. That criterion is a contract or a provision of a contract which is ‘unjust’. ‘Unjust’ includes ‘unconscionable, harsh or oppressive’ and ‘injustice’ is to be construed in a corresponding way (s 4(1)). [page 539] Second, it sets out the relief which may be granted in respect of an unjust contract or provision.139 It is not possible for people to waive, or contract out of, their rights under the Act (ss 17, 18). The term ‘unjust’ was selected in preference to ‘harsh and unconscionable’ in order to avoid any suggestion that the Act should be interpreted narrowly or in accordance with previous case law on that expression in earlier legislation.140 (We must recall in this context that the Act was passed three years before Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v Amadio141 was decided.) Whether a contract or a provision is unjust must be decided in relation to the circumstances relating to the contract at the time it was made. [24-24] Relevant considerations. Section 9(1) of the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW)142 provides as follows: In determining whether a contract or a provision of a contract is unjust in the circumstances relating to the contract at the time it was made, the court shall have regard to the public interest and to all the circumstances of the case, including such consequences or results as those arising in the event of:— (a) compliance with any or all of the provisions of the contract; or (b) non-compliance with, or contravention of, any or all of the provisions of the contract.
Section 9, referring to ‘all the circumstances of the case’, is clearly very wide. Significantly, it also recognises the public interest in contracts not being unjust or containing unjust terms and requires the court to have regard not merely to the interest of the party who complains but also the public at large. Section 9(2), without in any way affecting the generality of s 9(1), requires the court to have regard, to the extent that they are relevant to the circumstances of the case, to the matters specified in its 12 paragraphs. The following are some, perhaps the more important, of these: (a) whether or not there was any material inequality in bargaining power between the parties to the contract;
whether or not prior to or at the time the contract was made its provisions were the subject of (b) negotiation; … (d) whether or not any provisions of the contract impose conditions which are unreasonably difficult to comply with or not reasonably necessary for the protection of the legitimate interests of any party to the contract; (e) whether or not— (i)
any party to the contract (other than a corporation) was not reasonably able to protect his or her interests; or
[page 540] (ii) any person who represented any of the parties to the contract was not reasonably able to protect the interests of any party whom he or she represented, because of his or her age or the state of his or her physical or mental capacity; (f)
the relative economic circumstances, educational background and literacy of— (i)
the parties to the contract (other than a corporation); and
(ii) any person who represented any of the parties to the contract; … … (h) whether or not and when independent legal or other expert advice was obtained by the party seeking relief under this Act; … (j)
whether any undue influence, unfair pressure or unfair tactics were exerted on or used against the party seeking relief under this Act— (i)
by any other party to the contract;
(ii) by any person acting or appearing or purporting to act for or on behalf of any other party to the contract;143 or (iii) by any person to the knowledge (at the time the contract was made) of any other party to the contract or of any person acting or appearing or purporting to act for or on behalf of any other party to the contract; … and (l)
the commercial or other setting, purpose and effect of the contract.
This list of factors to which the court is to have regard was intended to guide the judges in the exercise of their new powers. This approach was taken partly because of a fear that in the absence of such guidance the courts might be unduly cautious in their application of the Act. Section 9 refers to circumstances which make the contract (or provision) unjust in its operation; for example, an unfair term. However, it also refers to circumstances which make the contract (or provision) unjust in the way it was
made; for example, unfair pressure.144 The question of whether a contract (or a provision of it) is unjust must be determined as at the time when the contract was made. Section 9(4) provides that in determining this issue the court must not have regard to any injustice arising from circumstances that were not reasonably foreseeable when the contract was made.145 Nevertheless, under s 9(5), in determining whether it is just to grant relief, the court may have regard to the conduct of the parties in relation to the performance of the contract since it was made. [24-25] Relief. Section 11 of the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW) provides for the making of ‘applications’ to the court for relief under the Act. It seems that the Act may be set up merely by way of defence and without the necessity of an application for relief.146 [page 541] Section 8 empowers the court to grant ancillary relief in accordance with Schedule 1. It applies where the court makes a decision or order under s 7. Various possibilities are listed, including such orders as may be ‘just in the circumstances’.147 [24-26] Interpretation. In S H Lock (Australia) Ltd v Kennedy148 the New South Wales Court of Appeal held that under s 7 of the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW), whether a contract or a provision of it is unjust is a separate question from what relief should be granted in respect of the contract. This interpretation was based on the fact that s 7 provides that the order must be made for the purpose of avoiding as far as practicable an unjust consequence or result. The effect is that there are two steps in granting relief: First, the court must decide by reference to the matters set out in the Act and the circumstances of entry into the contract, that the contract or a provision was unjust. Second, the order made must relate back to the ground of injustice, so that if there is no unjust consequence or result no order can be made. In West v AGC (Advances) Ltd149 AGC sought to enforce a deed of loan and guarantee against Mrs West, her husband, a company (‘Quiche’) and three directors of that company. By virtue of the deed Mrs West had borrowed $68,000 from AGC. She saw the loan as having a twofold purpose: to discharge an
existing mortgage on her home; and to lend money to Quiche, where her husband was a part-time employee. Her husband had suggested the loan as a way of profiting from Quiche’s expansion, and he guaranteed payment by Mrs West. In order to secure the loan Mrs West gave AGC a mortgage over her home and in these proceedings AGC sought to obtain possession after default on the loan. She had, however, received no independent legal advice: she had no solicitor (one of the directors acted for her). However, her son had advised her against the transaction and a barrister friend had told her to obtain more substantial guarantees from Quiche’s directors than she actually obtained. She also knew that the directors’ wives had refused to put their own homes up as security and was well aware that she was giving a mortgage and that AGC could have recourse to the property in the event of default. She also had some experience with business practice and concepts, and was not, in McHugh JA’s words,150 merely an ‘ordinary home owner’ or ‘suburban housewife’. The arrangement between Mrs West and Quiche was that Quiche would pay the instalments due under the loan in return for what was an interest-free loan from Mrs West. AGC knew of this arrangement and, from their possession of Quiche’s accounts, could reasonably have foreseen that the company would be wound up. In fact, but unknown to AGC, Quiche was [page 542] insolvent even with the loan — nearly $40,000 — from Mrs West. After making some payments Quiche was wound up in 1982. Although Hodgson J151 granted certain equitable relief to Mrs West, he refused to grant her relief under the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW). Her appeal was dismissed by a majority of the New South Wales Court of Appeal. McHugh JA (with whom Hope JA agreed) said:152 The Contracts Review Act 1980 is beneficial legislation. It must be interpreted liberally. But it operates within and not outside the domain of the law of contract, except for one form of ancillary relief available for the benefit of a person not a party to the contract.
He emphasised: the knowledge of Mrs West that AGC could (if necessary) sell her house; her business experience (admittedly fairly limited); the fact that she had received independent expert advice and that the loan was on ordinary commercial rates; and
that the Act regulates contracts not investments. Kirby P, dissenting, thought that relief should be granted. He emphasised the need to approach the Act as a departure from the old common law and equitable principles. The court should not begin by asking how the facts would be viewed under those principles. Rather, the court should go straight to the Act. In his view, given the absence of independent legal advice, Mrs West was entitled to relief. [24-27] Comparison with general law. It is clear that there are cases where a contract will not be ‘unconscionable’ under the doctrine of Commercial Bank of Australia v Amadio153 but will be ‘unjust’ for the purposes of the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW).154 One relevant factor is that under the general law the superior party must know of, or at least have notice of, the other’s situation of special disadvantage.155 However, under the Act it seems that knowledge or notice is not essential, but very relevant to the court’s exercise of discretion as to whether to grant relief.156 It would appear to follow that the element of moral blameworthiness which seems inherent in the application of the general law doctrine157 is not essential when the Contracts Review Act is being applied.158 [page 543] As we have seen159 the traditional form of relief under the general law has been to rescind contracts, sometimes on conditions. But the remedies available under the statute are wider and more flexible. The general law unconscionability doctrine deals essentially with ‘procedural’ rather than ‘substantive’ unconscionability.160 The former refers to elements in the process of formation of the contract, the latter to the contents of the transaction itself. Although both elements will usually be present before courts will intervene under the Contracts Review Act provisions, this is not essential. Perhaps in some cases extreme substantive unfairness alone will suffice.161 This is a point of significance in the context of ‘abstract’ control of unfair contracts, discussed below.
Unfair Contract Terms Legislation [24-28] Introduction. The discussion above is mainly concerned with
legislation the objective of which is either to confer power on courts to grant relief against particular contracts (the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW)) or particular conduct (the unconscionable conduct provisions of the Australian Consumer Law). There is no general attempt in such legislation to police types of contractual term on the basis that they are inherently unfair. There are, moreover, relatively few examples of this occurring under contract doctrine. However, the law of penalties is an example.162 In recent years suggestions have been made in favour of such ‘abstract control’.163 An early example is the European Community Directive of 1993 on Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts, which contains an indicative and nonexhaustive list of the terms which may be regarded as unfair.164 A comprehensive regime now operates under Pt 2-3 of the Australian Consumer Law.165 There is a parallel regime under the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cth). [page 544] [24-29] Concepts and definitions. The unfair contract terms regime of the Australian Consumer Law applies to ‘consumer contracts’. A ‘consumer contract’ is not a contract with a ‘consumer’, as defined for the purposes of the consumer guarantees regime. Rather, it is specifically defined by s 23 of the Australian Consumer Law for the purposes of the unfair contract terms regime as: a standard form contract; with an individual; for the supply of goods or services or a sale or grant of an interest in land; and where the acquisition is wholly or predominantly for personal, domestic or household use or consumption. Four initial points may be noted. First, a corporation cannot avail itself of the unfair contract terms regime. Second, an individual cannot invoke the unfair contract terms regime if goods, services or land are acquired for business purposes. Third, there is no price ceiling.
Fourth, the concept ‘standard form contract’ is not defined. Instead, all contracts are presumed to be standard form contracts. The onus of proof is on the person who alleges that the contract is not a standard form contract to prove that to be the position.166 Section 24(1) of the Australian Consumer Law states when a term is ‘unfair’ for the purposes of the unfair contract terms regime. It provides:167 (1) A term of a consumer contract is unfair if: (a) it would cause a significant imbalance in the parties’ rights and obligations arising under the contract; and (b) it is not reasonably necessary in order to protect the legitimate interests of the party who would be advantaged by the term; and (c) it would cause detriment (whether financial or otherwise) to a party if it were to be applied or relied on.
Section 24(2) sets out the matters to be considered for the purpose of s 24(1). It provides: (2) In determining whether a term of a consumer contract is unfair under subsection (1), a court may take into account such matters as it thinks relevant, but must take into account the following: (a) the extent to which the term is transparent; (b) the contract as a whole.
The concept of ‘transparent’ is explained in s 24(3) of the Australian Consumer Law: (3) A term is transparent if the term is: (a) expressed in reasonably plain language; and (b) legible; and (c) presented clearly; and
[page 545] (d) readily available to any party affected by the term.
Therefore, a term is not unfair if it is reasonably necessary in order to protect the legitimate interests of the party who would be advantaged by the term. Section 24(4) of the Australian Consumer Law states: (4) For the purposes of subsection (1)(b), a term of a consumer contract is presumed not to be reasonably necessary in order to protect the legitimate interests of the party who would be advantaged by the term, unless that party proves otherwise.
It follows that, if the question arises whether the term is ‘reasonably necessary
in order to protect the legitimate interests of the party who would be advantaged by the term’, the supplier must prove the term is reasonably necessary, and therefore not unfair. There are three types of terms which cannot be reviewed as ‘unfair terms’ under the Australian Consumer Law. These are stated in s 26(1): (1) a term which defines the main subject matter of the contract; (2) a term which sets the upfront price168 payable under the contract; and (3) a term which is required, or expressly permitted, by a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory.
In addition, certain classes of contract, such as charterparties, are exempted.169 [24-30] Terms which may be unfair. Any term of a consumer contract which does not fall within the types of term exempted by the Australian Consumer Law may be reviewed for fairness. In order to provide some assistance in deciding whether a term is unfair, s 25(1) sets out a list of examples ‘of the kinds of terms of a consumer contract that may be unfair’: (a) a term that permits, or has the effect of permitting, one party (but not another party) to avoid or limit performance of the contract; (b) a term that permits, or has the effect of permitting, one party (but not another party) to terminate the contract; (c) a term that penalises, or has the effect of penalising, one party (but not another party) for a breach or termination of the contract; (d) a term that permits, or has the effect of permitting, one party (but not another party) to vary the terms of the contract; (e) a term that permits, or has the effect of permitting, one party (but not another party) to renew or not renew the contract; (f)
a term that permits, or has the effect of permitting, one party to vary the upfront price payable under the contract without the right of another party to terminate the contract;
(g) a term that permits, or has the effect of permitting, one party unilaterally to vary the characteristics of the goods or services to be supplied, or the interest in land to be sold or granted, under the contract;
[page 546] (h) a term that permits, or has the effect of permitting, one party unilaterally to determine whether the contract has been breached or to interpret its meaning; (i)
a term that limits, or has the effect of limiting, one party’s vicarious liability for its agents;
(j)
a term that permits, or has the effect of permitting, one party to assign the contract to the detriment of another party without that other party’s consent;
(k) a term that limits, or has the effect of limiting, one party’s right to sue another party; (l)
a term that limits, or has the effect of limiting, the evidence one party can adduce in proceedings relating to the contract;
(m) a term that imposes, or has the effect of imposing, the evidential burden on one party in proceedings relating to the contract; (n) a term of a kind, or a term that has an effect of a kind, prescribed by the regulations.
Many of these examples lack focus. For instance, without some focus for ‘a term that permits, or has the effect of permitting, one party (but not another party) to terminate the contract’, it is difficult to see how the example is helpful in enabling the parties to a consumer contract to determine whether a term is likely to be regarded as unfair. The mere fact that it entitles ‘one party (but not another party) to terminate the contract’ is hardly determinative. [24-31] Effect of unfair term. A contract term which is unfair under the Australian Consumer Law is void: s 23(1). The decision that a term is void can only be made by a court. However, application may be made by a party to a consumer contract or the regulator (that is, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission). The mere fact that a standard form contract includes an unfair term is not an offence, or the contravention of a prohibition. If a term is found to be unfair, s 23(2) of the Australian Consumer Law provides that the contract ‘continues to bind the parties if it is capable of operating without the unfair term’. Given that neither the upfront price nor a term which defines the main subject matter of the contract can be reviewed,170 in most cases the consumer contract will continue to bind the parties. Once a term has been declared unfair under s 250 of the Australian Consumer Law, relief may be granted by way of injunction or compensation against a person applying or relying on, or purporting to apply or rely on, the term.171 1.
Cf [1-13]. See generally D Harland, ‘Unconscionable and Unfair Contracts: An Australian Perspective’ in Brownsword, Hird and Howells, eds, Good Faith in Contract, 1999, Chapter 11; J W Carter and Andrew Stewart, ‘Commerce and Conscience: the High Court’s Developing View of Contract’ (1993) 23 UWALR 49; P Finn, ‘Unconscionable Conduct’ (1994) 8 JCL 37; G Dal Pont, ‘The Varying Shades of Unconscionable Conduct — Same Term, Different Meaning’ (2000) 19 Aust Bar Rev 135.
2.
See [7-01]–[7-23]. Cf [9-21] (part performance); [38-09] (restitution).
3.
See [31-13], [31-17]. See also [38-32] (relief against forfeiture).
4.
See, eg [37-12].
5.
See, eg [20-31], [20-54], [21-10]. Cf [22-21] (duress), [23-16] (undue influence).
6.
See [24-02].
7.
See, eg Elisabeth Peden, ‘Incorporating Terms of Good Faith in Contract Law in Australia’ (2001) 23
Syd LR 222. 8.
See the discussion [24-15]ff.
9.
See also [28-09]. See Elisabeth Peden, ‘When Common Law Trumps Equity: The Rise of Good Faith and Reasonableness and the Demise of Unconscionability’ (2005) 21 JCL 226.
10.
[1962] AC 600 at 626.
11.
See generally Chen-Wishart, Unconscionable Bargains, 1989; D C Ford, ‘Unconscionable Conduct — A Matter for the Courts or the Legislatures?’ (1985) 13 ABLR 307. Cf Garry Muir, ‘Contract and Equity: Striking A Balance’ (1985) 10 Adel LR 153.
12.
(1983) 151 CLR 447; 46 ALR 402 (see [24-10]).
13.
See L J Priestley, ‘Contract — The Burgeoning Maelstrom’ (1988) 1 JCL 15 and [24-20]ff.
14.
See Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, Chapter 16.
15.
See J L Barton, ‘The Enforcement of Hard Bargains’ (1987) 103 LQR 118.
16.
A similar situation was that of persons entitled to property in remainder upon the death of an aged life tenant.
17.
See, eg Fry v Lane (1888) 40 Ch D 312; O’Rorke v Bolingbroke (1877) 2 App Cas 814.
18.
Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, para 16-040.
19.
Sale of Reversions Act 1867 (UK); see now Law of Property Act 1925 (UK), s 174.
20.
ACT: Civil Law (Property) Act 2006, s 241; NSW: Conveyancing Act 1919, s 37C; NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 210; Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 230; SA: Law of Property Act 1936, s 88; Tas: Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1884, s 42; Vic: Property Law Act 1958, s 175; WA: Property Law Act 1969, s 92.
21.
(1888) 40 Ch D 312. See also Cresswell v Potter (1968) [1978] 1 WLR 225 at 257 per Megarry J.
22.
(1888) 40 Ch D 312 at 322.
23.
Evans v Llewellin (1787) 1 Cox 333; 29 ER 1191; Earl of Aylesford v Morris (1873) LR 8 Ch App 484; Fry v Lane (1888) 40 Ch D 312.
24.
Cf Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v Amadio (1983) 151 CLR 447 at 460, 479.
25.
See, eg A H Angelo and E P Ellinger, ‘Unconscionable Contracts: A Comparative Study’ (1979) 4 Otago L Rev 300; I J Hardingham, ‘Unconscionable Dealing’ in Finn, ed, Essays in Equity, 1985, p 1; K E Lindgren, ‘Unconscionable Dealing’ in Laws of Australia, 1993, Chapter 35.
26.
(1956) 99 CLR 362.
27.
(1956) 99 CLR 362 at 405. The reference to sex in the list of circumstances of disadvantage is quite anachronistic: see European Asian of Australia Ltd v Kurland (1985) 8 NSWLR 192 at 200.
28.
(1956) 99 CLR 362. See also Johnson v Buttress (1936) 56 CLR 113; Yerkey v Jones (1939) 63 CLR 649; Wilton v Farnworth (1948) 76 CLR 646.
29.
(1751) 2 Ves Sen 125; 28 ER 82 (see [24-04]).
30.
(1956) 99 CLR 362 at 385.
31.
(1956) 99 CLR 362 at 415.
32.
(1956) 99 CLR 362 at 428.
33.
(1956) 99 CLR 362 at 428–9, citing Sir John Stuart V-C in Longmate v Ledger (1860) 2 Giff 157 at 163; 66 ER 67 at 69.
34.
Cf Alec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil (Great Britain) Ltd [1985] 1 WLR 173 at 182–3.
35.
[1975] 1 QB 326.
36.
See [23-10].
37.
[1975] 1 QB 326 at 339. See Philip Slayton, ‘The Unequal Bargain Doctrine: Lord Denning in Lloyds Bank v Bundy’ (1976) 22 McGill LJ 94.
38.
For discussion see Christopher Carr, ‘Inequality of Bargaining Power’ (1975) 38 MLR 463; S M Waddams, ‘Unconscionability in Contracts’ (1976) 39 MLR 369.
39.
[1985] 1 AC 686 (see [23-12]).
40.
Lloyds Bank Ltd v Bundy [1975] 1 QB 326 was approved on the majority basis of undue influence; but see Paul Finn, ‘Contract and the Fiduciary Principle’ (1989) 12 UNSWLJ 76 at 96.
41.
See [24-04], [24-06].
42.
Alec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil (Great Britain) Ltd [1985] 1 WLR 173.
43.
See [26-01]–[26-21].
44.
See [23-09], [23-10].
45.
See [24-04], [24-06].
46.
See [24-20]–[24-31].
47.
See [24-04], [24-05].
48.
English law is more restrained. See, eg National Westminster Bank Plc v Morgan [1985] 1 AC 686. Some change is suggested by Credit Lyonnais Bank Nederland NV v Burch [1997] 1 All ER 144; Portman Building Society v Dusangh (2000) 80 P & CR 20.
49.
(1983) 151 CLR 447 (see Ashley Black (1986) 11 Syd LR 134). Cf Micarone v Perpetual Trustees Australia Ltd (1999) 75 SASR 1.
50.
(1983) 151 CLR 447 at 459.
51.
[1975] 1 QB 326 (see [23-10]).
52.
(1983) 151 CLR 447 at 459.
53.
[1975] 1 QB 326 at 336.
54.
(1983) 151 CLR 447 at 462.
55.
(1983) 151 CLR 447 at 467. Cf D K Malcolm, ‘The Penetration of Equitable Principles into Modern Commercial Law — Part I’ (1987) 3 Aust Bar Rev 185 at 213.
56.
(1983) 151 CLR 447 at 474.
57.
(1983) 151 CLR 447 at 479. But see at 474 and compare Louth v Diprose (1992) 175 CLR 621 at 631–2, 637; 110 ALR 1.
58.
(1983) 151 CLR 447 at 490.
59.
See, eg Begbie v State Bank of New South Wales (1994) ATPR ¶41-288; Teachers Health Investments Pty Ltd v Wynne [1996] ASC ¶56-356.
60.
Geelong Building Society (in liq) v Thomas (1996) V Conv R ¶54-545 at 66,477.
61.
See, eg Geelong Building Society (in liq) v Thomas (1996) V Conv R ¶54-545. See also Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Samton Holdings Pty Ltd (2002) 117 FCR 301; 189 ALR 76.
62.
Begbie v State Bank of New South Wales (1994) ATPR ¶41-288.
63.
Begbie v State Bank of New South Wales (1994) ATPR ¶41-288 at 41,897.
64.
See also Familiar Pty Ltd v Samarkos (1994) 115 FLR 443; Bridgewater v Leahy (1998) 194 CLR 457; 158 ALR 66.
65.
Antonovic v Volker (1986) 7 NSWLR 151 at 165.
66.
Cf National Westminster Bank Plc v Morgan [1985] 1 AC 686 at 709.
67.
See Australian and New Zealand Banking Group v Karam (2005) 64 NSWLR 149. Cf Hart v O’Connor [1985] AC 1000 at 1024, 1028; Antonovic v Volker (1986) 7 NSWLR 151 at 163–5; Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 440–1; 95 ALR 321. As to the position where a creditor leaves it to the debtor to obtain the signing of a guarantee by a third party, and as to the special rule where a wife guarantees her husband’s debts, see [23-05].
68.
See, eg Commercial Bank of Australia v Amadio (1983) 151 CLR 447 at 475; Antonovic v Volker (1986) 7 NSWLR 151 at 165.
69.
(1983) 151 CLR 447.
70.
See [6-21].
71.
See Commercial Bank of Australia v Amadio (1983) 151 CLR 447 at 480–1; Vadasz v Pioneer Concrete (SA) Pty Ltd (1995) 184 CLR 102; 130 ALR 570; Bridgewater v Leahy (1998) 194 CLR 457; 158 ALR 66.
72.
See [18-43]–[18-45].
73.
See Baburin v Baburin [1991] 2 Qd R 240.
74.
See [24-18], [24-26].
75.
Cf [18-47]–[18-51].
76.
(1983) 151 CLR 447 (see [24-10]).
77.
Apart from the rather special cases of so-called ‘expectant heirs’ (see [24-04]), which have no contemporary relevance and were in any event probably never of real significance in Australian social conditions.
78.
L J Priestley, ‘Unconscionability as a Restriction on the Exercise of Contractual Rights’ in Carter, ed, Rights and Remedies for Breach of Contract, 1986, pp 80–1. See also Sir Anthony Mason, ‘The Place of Equity and Equitable Remedies in the Contemporary Common Law World’ (1994) 110 LQR 238 at 248–9.
79.
See Louth v Diprose (1992) 175 CLR 621, which involved a gift rather than a contract but the Amadio principles were applied.
80.
See, eg Grineff v Chusov [2000] ANZ Conv R ¶212; Edmunds v Pickering (No 4) (2000) 77 SASR 381; Project Blue Moon Pty Ltd v Fairway Trading Pty Ltd [2000] ANZ Conv R ¶628; National Australia Bank Ltd v Starbronze Pty Ltd [2001] ANZ Conv R ¶247.
81.
(1939) 63 CLR 649.
82.
See Garcia v National Australia Bank (1998) 194 CLR 395; 155 ALR 614 (see [23-05]).
83.
In respect of unconscionable conduct in relation to financial services see Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cth), ss 12CA, 12CB and 12CC.
84.
Replacing Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 51AA.
85.
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v C G Berbatis Holdings Pty Ltd (2003) 214 CLR 51 at 71; 197 ALR 153 at 163.
86.
See D Healey, ‘Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Dealings’ (1993) 1 TPLJ 169; Trade
Practices Commission, Unconscionable Conduct in Commercial Dealings, 1993. 87.
As to this see [24-18].
88.
(2003) 214 CLR 51; 197 ALR 153.
89.
(1983) 151 CLR 447 (see [24-10]).
90.
This was left open in Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v C G Berbatis Holdings Pty Ltd (2003) 214 CLR 51 at 62–3, 74, 84, 109.
91.
See Competition and Consumer Legislation Amendment Act 2011 (Cth). Sections 12CB and 12CC of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cth) were also replaced and now relate to ‘unconscionable conduct in connection with financial services’.
92.
As to the meaning of this phrase see [19-04].
93.
‘Have regard to’ simply means ‘to take into account’ or ‘to consider’: A v Pelekanakis (1999) 91 FCR 70.
94.
See Australian Consumer Law, s 21(4).
95.
See also Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), Pt IVB (Industry Codes) which permits industry codes to be prescribed and enforced and prohibits corporations from contravening applicable industry codes.
96.
See ACCC v Leelee Pty Ltd (2000) ATPR ¶41-742.
97.
The definition is a narrow one. See Australian Consumer Law, s 2(1) (has the meaning given by s 995-1(1) of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997).
98.
See [19-08].
99.
See Australian Consumer Law, s 232 (replacing Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 80). See [19-12].
100. Replacing Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 82. See [19-13]–[19-14]. 101. Replacing Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 87. See [19-16]. 102. This is subject to the possible implications of Webb Distributors (Aust) Pty Ltd v Victoria (1993) 179 CLR 15; 117 ALR 321 (see [19-16]). 103. See Australian Consumer Law, s 236. See [19-15]. 104. For discussion of the earlier provisions see, eg G Taperell, ‘Unconscionable Conduct and Small Business’ (1990) 18 ABLR 370; A J Duggan, ‘Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), Section 52A and the Law of Unjust Contracts’ (1991) 13 Syd LR 138; A Finlay, ‘Unconscionable Conduct and the Business Plaintiff: Has Australia Gone Too Far?’ (1999) 28 Anglo-American L Rev 470; Philip Tucker, ‘Too Much Concern Too Soon? Rationalising the Elements of Section 51AC of the Trade Practices Act’ (2001) 17 JCL 120. 105. See, eg Dai v Telstra Corp Ltd (2000) 171 ALR 348. 106. See, eg Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Simply No-Knead (Franchising) Pty Ltd (2000) 104 FCR 253 at 265–7; 178 ALR 304; Hurley v McDonald’s Australia Ltd (2000) ATPR ¶41741; Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Samton Holdings Pty Ltd (2002) 117 FCR 301. 107. Hurley v McDonald’s Australia Ltd (2000) ATPR ¶41-741 at 40,585 per the Full Federal Court (approving Cameron v Qantas Airways Ltd (1994) 55 FCR 147 at 179); Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Samton Holdings Pty Ltd (2002) 117 FCR 30. 108. See also Leveraged Equities Ltd v Goodridge (2011) 274 ALR 655 at 703; [2011] FCAFC 3 at [417] per Jacobson J, with whom Finkelstein and Stone JJ agreed (in relation to Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cth, s 12CB) not unconscionable for margin lender to enforce
rights under contract where there was no attempt to take ‘improper advantage’ of applicant). 109. (1983) 151 CLR 447 (see [24-10]). 110. P Finn, ‘Commerce, the Common Law and Morality’ (1989) 17 Melb ULR 87 at 87. Cf Peter Birks and Chin Nyuk Yin, ‘On the Nature of Undue Influence’ in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995, p 60. See also Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v Amadio (1983) 151 CLR 447 at 478. 111. Cf Olex Focas Pty Ltd v Skodaexport Co Ltd [1998] 3 VR 380 at 401–5; Tri-Global (Aust) Pty Ltd v Colonial Mutual Life Assurance Society Ltd (1992) ATPR ¶41-174 at 40,382. 112. See [24-26]. 113. Contrast the unfair contract terms regime. See [24-28]–[24-31]. 114. Cf Anthony Mason, ‘The Place of Equity and Equitable Remedies in the Contemporary Common Law World’ (1994) 110 LQR 238 at 242, 256. See also A F Mason, ‘Contract, Good Faith and Equitable Standards in Fair Dealing’ (2000) 116 LQR 66 at 89–90. 115. See in particular Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1991) 22 NSWLR 1 at 20 (reversed without reference to the point (1993) 176 CLR 344). See also Jedda Investments Pty Ltd v Krambousanos (1997) 72 FCR 138. The frequently cited judgment of McHugh JA in West v AGC (Advances) Ltd (1986) 5 NSWLR 610 is rather ambiguous on this point. 116. See [24-28]–[24-31]. 117. See also [14-22]–[14-25] (legislation dealing with exclusion clauses in contracts for the supply of goods or services). 118. National Consumer Credit Protection Act 2009 (Cth), Sch 1. 119. See ss 76–81. ‘Unjust’ is defined in s 76(8) to include ‘unconscionable, harsh or oppressive’, which is the same as the definition in the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW). 120. J R Peden, Harsh and Unconscionable Contracts (Report to the Minister for Consumer Affairs and Co-operative Societies and the Attorney General for New South Wales, 1976). See also Peden, The Law of Unjust Contracts, 1982; A L Terry, ‘Unconscionable Contracts in NSW — the Contracts Review Act 1980’ (1982) 10 ABLR 311. 121. Cf Unconscionable Transactions Relief Act RSO, Ontario 1970, c 472. 122. But see s 10 (general orders) and Minister for Consumer Affairs v W W Vallack Real Estate Pty Ltd (1986) ASC ¶55-478. 123. This includes deeds: Toscano v Holland Securities Pty Ltd (1985) 1 NSWLR 145 at 149. 124. This includes undue influence. See generally Chapter 23. 125. West v AGC (Advances) Ltd (1986) 5 NSWLR 610 at 621 per McHugh JA. 126. See [24-20]. 127. Section 5. 128. Section 6(1). This includes a public or local authority. The Act also does not apply to certain contracts of service: s 21. 129. Other than as described in s 4(2). 130. Australian Bank Ltd v Stokes (1985) 3 NSWLR 174 at 176. 131. Ford (by his tutor Watkinson) v Perpetual Trustees Victoria Ltd (2009) 75 NSWLR 42; 257 ALR 658 at 680; [2009] NSWCA 186 at [98] per Allsop P and Young JA. 132. Cf Beaumont v Helvetic Investment Corp Pty Ltd (1982) ASC ¶55-194.
133. Cf Collins v Parker (1984) NSW Conv R ¶55-212. 134. Cf Toscano v Holland Securities Pty Ltd (1985) 1 NSWLR 145 at 149. 135. Coombs v Bahama Palm Trading Pty Ltd (1991) ASC ¶56-097. 136. Bosnjak v Farrow Services Pty Ltd (in liq) (1993) ASC ¶56-225 per Cripps JA. 137. By s 4(1) of the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW) ‘land instrument’ means an instrument that transfers title to land, creates an estate or interest in land or is a dealing within the meaning of the Real Property Act 1900 (NSW). 138. See Toscano v Holland Securities Pty Ltd (1985) 1 NSWLR 145. 139. And note [24-25] (ancillary relief). 140. See Peden, The Law of Unjust Contracts, 1982, pp 94–6. 141. (1983) 151 CLR 447 (see [24-10]). 142. For a discussion see Ben Zipser, ‘Unjust Contracts and the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW)’ (2001) 17 JCL 76; T Carlin, ‘The Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW) — 20 Years On’ (2001) 23 Syd LR 125. 143. See Antonovic v Volker (1986) 7 NSWLR 151. 144. See Dillon v Charter Travel Co Ltd (1989) 92 ALR 331 at 367. 145. As to ‘reasonably foreseeable’ see Custom Credit Corp Ltd v Lupi [1992] 1 VR 99; Morlend Finance Corp (Vic) Pty Ltd v Westendorp [1993] 2 VR 284. 146. Commercial Banking Co of Sydney Ltd v Pollard [1983] 1 NSWLR 74. But see Beaumont v Helvetic Investment Corp Pty Ltd (1982) ASC ¶55-194. 147. As to orders in favour of or against a person who is not a party to the contract see s 12 and Schedule 1. See also s 16 (time limit on applications for relief). 148. (1988) 12 NSWLR 482. 149. (1986) 5 NSWLR 610. 150. (1986) 5 NSWLR 610 at 631. 151. See AGC (Advances) Ltd v West (1984) 5 NSWLR 590. 152. (1986) 5 NSWLR 610 at 631. See also Sharman v Kunert (1985) 1 NSWLR 225 at 231. 153. (1983) 151 CLR 447 (see [24-10]). 154. For examples see Melverton v Commonwealth Development Bank of Australia (1989) ASC ¶55-921; Robinson v ANZ Banking Group Ltd (1990) ASC ¶55-979. 155. See [24-10]–[24-14]. 156. See in particular Collier v Morlend Finance Corp (Victoria) Pty Ltd (1989) ASC ¶55 716. See also Elders Rural Finance Ltd v Smith (1996) 41 NSWLR 296; Esanda Finance Corp Ltd v Tong (1997) 41 NSWLR 482. 157. But see Commercial Bank of Australia Ltd v Amadio (1983) 151 CLR 447 at 478. 158. See in particular Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1991) 22 NSWLR 1 at 20 (reversed without reference to the point (1993) 176 CLR 344; 111 ALR 289). Cf Morlend Finance Corp (Vic) Pty Ltd v Westendorp [1993] 2 VR 284. 159. See [24-13]–[24-14]. 160. But see Chen-Wishart, Unconscionable Bargains, 1989, especially pp 104–19, arguing that judges have in fact been far more concerned with substantive factors than they have generally articulated.
See also Asia Pacific International Pty Ltd v Dalrymple [2000] 2 Qd R 229, which seems very close to a decision based on substantive unconscionability. 161. See in particular the judgment of McHugh JA in West v AGC (Advances) Ltd (1986) 5 NSWLR 610. 162. See generally [37-07]–[37-17]. 163. For discussion see E Hondius, ‘Unfair Contract Terms: New Control Systems’ (1978) 26 Amer J of Comp L 525; Hondius, Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts, 1987; David Harland, ‘The Regulation of Unfair Contracts in Australia’ in Rachagan, ed, Developing Consumer Law in Asia, 1994, p 89. 164. See E Hondius, ‘EC Directive on Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts’ (1994) 7 JCL 34. For an example of implementation of the principles of the Directive see Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts Regulations 1999 (UK). See Office of Fair Trading v Abbey National Plc [2010] 1 AC 696; [2009] UKSC 6. See also Elizabeth Macdonald, ‘Unifying Unfair Terms Legislation’ (2004) 67 MLR 69; Paolisa Nebbia, ‘Reforming the UK Law on Unfair Terms; the Draft Unfair Contract Terms Bill’ (2007) 23 JCL 227; Simon Whittaker, ‘Unfair Contract Terms, Unfair Prices and Bank Charges’ (2011) 74 MLR 106. 165. This is based on the provisions formerly contained in the Fair Trading Act 1999 (Vic). 166. See Australian Consumer Law, s 27. 167. See also Australian Consumer Law, s 2(1) (‘unfair’). 168. See Australian Consumer Law, s 26(2). 169. See Australian Consumer Law, s 28. See also Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), s 131A(2) (b). 170. See [7-06]. 171. See Australian Consumer Law, s 232(3) (injunction), Australian Consumer Law, s 237(1) (compensation or other order). See also Australian Consumer Law, s 238, Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), s 137D.
[page 547]
PART VI
Illegality
[page 549]
Chapter 25
Illegal Contracts [25-01] Scope of this chapter. Whether a contract is illegal, or invalid in the sense of being void1 or unenforceable,2 must depend on the circumstances of the case. In this and the next chapter we deal with contracts which are illegal and/or contrary to public policy. The concern is with illegality existing at the time of the contract.3 The consequences of such illegality are discussed in Chapter 27. A contract may be illegal because it is prohibited by statute, or because it infringes a rule of public policy. It should not, however, be thought that wherever statutory requirements are not fulfilled the resulting contract, if indeed one results, is necessarily illegal or affected by illegality. For example, where the parties to a contract fail to comply with a requirement of writing,4 the contract (although unenforceable) is not illegal. Similarly, it might be said, in a very general sense, that it is ‘illegal’ for a person (or corporation) who lacks full contractual capacity to enter into a contract except in accordance with the applicable statutory or common law rules.5 However, this is not what is ordinarily understood by the concept of illegality. [25-02] State of the law. The topic of illegality is one of the least satisfactory branches of contract law. This is perhaps more true of the consequences of illegality than the issue of when a contract is in fact illegal or contrary to public policy,6 but it is also true of the concept of illegality itself. It is frequently said that some contracts are illegal and void, whereas others are simply void; and that illegality or ‘voidness’ may be the result of statute or a rule of public policy. However, it has also been suggested that when a contract is affected by illegality it is usually merely unenforceable. Not surprisingly, when attempts are made to analyse the law there is little agreement on how it should be discussed.7 It also seems to be generally accepted that it is impossible to reconcile all the cases on illegality.8 To some extent this is understandable because views
[page 550] on the contravention of public policy are likely to change over time. But there are substantive inconsistencies, not all of which can be explained simply by saying that public policy has changed. Inconsistencies are particularly in evidence where the consequences of illegality are in issue.9 Although these comments do little to engender the confidence of students trying to come to grips with the topic, it is appropriate to warn the reader that disagreements are very frequent in this area.
Some Basic Rules and Distinctions [25-03] Illegality need not always be pleaded. In the vast majority of cases the issue of illegality is raised when one party to a contractual dispute pleads illegality as a defence to a claim arising out of the contract or its performance. However, because of the nature of illegality — the contravention of statute or a rule of public policy — the court may be obliged to have regard to illegality even if it has not been pleaded. In Knowles v Fuller10 Jordan CJ said that a court ‘will not entertain a defence of illegality which has not been pleaded’, unless: the contract giving rise to the plaintiff’s claim was on its face (‘ex facie’) illegal;11 the plaintiff is unable to prove the case without relying on an illegal transaction;12 or the fact of illegality comes to light at the trial of the action and it is clear from the circumstances that there is no way in which the illegality could have been cured.13 Jordan CJ regarded the third case as an exceptional one, and if there is the possibility that what appears to be a case of illegality might be explained or cured the court will not allow the defendant to raise illegality as a defence. Thus, the defendant in Knowles v Fuller was not permitted to rely on a defence of illegality based on the failure to obtain prior approval of building work under s 311 of the Local Government Act 1919 (NSW), because the plaintiff might have adduced additional evidence to negative the contravention of the statute or have obtained a certificate of compliance, under s 317A of the Act.14
[page 551] [25-04] Contracts to do an illegal act. Perhaps the most basic general principle is that a contract entered into with the object of committing an illegal act will not be enforced.15 As Devlin J explained in St John Shipping Corp v Joseph Rank Ltd,16 the ‘application of this principle depends upon proof of the intent, at the time the contract was made, to break the law’. This principle applies not only to a contract entered into with the object of infringing a statute, but also to a contract to infringe a common law rule. If both parties possess the intent the contract is in fact a criminal conspiracy. Such a contract is clearly illegal. [25-05] Varying impacts of statutes on contracts. The effect of statute law on contracts varies as between statutes. What must be emphasised is that each Act raises its own issues of construction.17 (1) An Act may prohibit the making of contracts of a particular description or (more broadly) ‘agreements’, ‘arrangements’ or ‘understandings’.18 Many Acts which, while lacking language of express prohibition, penalise the making of contracts of a particular description, fall within this first class. (2) Parliament may, while stopping short of express or implied prohibition, declare contracts of a particular description to be null and void. (3) Parliament may merely declare void a particular class of contractual provision, such as an exclusion clause.19 (4) Parliament may render contracts void in whole or in part as against a third party only, while not touching the validity of contracts as between the parties.20 Strictly speaking, only the contracts within (1) are examples of illegal contracts. They are expressly or impliedly prohibited. The making of the contracts within the other classes is lawful, but legal enforcement is withheld.21 [25-06] Varying impacts of public policy. Similarly, not all contracts affected by public policy are illegal. In some such cases a contract may be rendered void, or merely unenforceable, without actually being illegal. For example, a contract provision which is in restraint of trade22 is considered to be unenforceable (or perhaps void) on the ground of public policy, but not illegal. This distinction may be important when the consequences of illegality are being considered.23
[page 552] Most importantly, even where a contract is perfectly valid it may be contrary to public policy for a particular claim to be brought in connection with a contract. For example, a person who suffers injury while doing an illegal act may be disentitled by public policy to claim under an insurance contract which would otherwise have applied. That is not because the insurance contract is illegal, or void. It would be because public policy requires a court to withhold a remedy.
Contracts Prohibited by Statute General [25-07] Issue of legislative intention. Whether a contract is prohibited by statute depends on the intention of the legislature as expressed in the statute, and principles governing the interpretation of statutes must be applied.24 The intention may be express or it may be inferred by interpretation. The recent decisions indicate that a legislative intention to prohibit a contract is not to be inferred except in the clearest cases.25 In St John Shipping Corp v Joseph Rank Ltd26 Devlin J stated, as a general principle, that a court ‘will not enforce a contract which is expressly or impliedly prohibited by statute’. He went on to explain: ‘if the contract is of this class it does not matter what the intent of the parties is; if the statute prohibits the contract it is unenforceable whether the parties meant to break the law or not’. In distinguishing a contract entered into with the intention of breaking a statute from a contract expressly or impliedly prohibited by statute, Devlin J said:27 In the former class you have only to look and see what acts the statute prohibits; it does not matter whether or not it prohibits a contract; if a contract is deliberately made to do a prohibited act, that contract will be unenforceable. In the latter class, you have to consider not what acts the statute prohibits, but what contracts it prohibits; but you are not concerned at all with the intent of the parties; if the parties enter into a prohibited contract, that contract is unenforceable.
[25-08] Concept of ‘statute’. The concept of statutory prohibition extends beyond Acts of parliament and therefore includes, for example, regulations made under statutes. Thus, in Re Mahmoud and Ispahani28 a contract which contravened an Order issued by the Food Controller under the Defence of the Realm Regulations (UK) (called the Seeds, Oils and Fats Order 1919) was held
to be illegal and prohibited. [25-09] Commission of offence not conclusive. In deciding whether a contract is prohibited by statute it is always material to consider whether an [page 553] offence has been (or may have been) committed by either or both the parties. Although a contract may be void where the statute does not make contravention an offence, such a contract would not be illegal.29 Illegality is more likely if an offence has been committed. If the contract is not expressly prohibited, the court must consider what consequences flow from the offence. There is, for example, a certain reluctance to treat a contract as prohibited where the offence is committed during the performance of the contract rather than at the time of its formation.30 It follows that the commission of an offence is not conclusive. For example, in Dalgety and New Zealand Loan Ltd v C Imeson Pty Ltd31 a diseased animal was sold in contravention of the Cattle Slaughtering and Diseased Animals and Meat Act 1902 (NSW), and an offence committed under s 47 of the Act. Nevertheless, the court held that the contract in issue was not illegal because it was not prohibited by the Act. [25-10] Illegality in formation or performance. The main examples of illegal contracts prohibited by statute are those which are illegal in formation. For example, in George v Greater Adelaide Land Development Co Ltd32 s 23(c) of the Town Planning and Development Act 1920 (SA) made it unlawful for a person, ‘to offer for sale, or to sell, or to convey, transfer or otherwise dispose of any existing allotment or parcel of land’, except in accordance with the Act. Section 44 imposed a penalty on any person who contravened certain sections of the Act, including s 23. A contract for the sale of certain allotments of land was held to be illegal because it contravened the Act, and was expressly prohibited, even though the parties had in the contract expressed an intention that performance was not to take place until the Act had been complied with. The position would have been different had the statute merely prohibited the disposition.33 On the other hand, where the illegality arises in the course of performance it will be more difficult to establish that a contract is prohibited.34 Nevertheless,
the issue is the same as that applied to contracts illegal in formation, namely, whether the contract was expressly or impliedly prohibited by the statute. [page 554]
Express Provisions [25-11] Express prohibition. In order for the prohibition of a contract to be express it is not necessary for the statute to say ‘and any contract entered into in contravention of this statute is illegal’. If the substance of the relevant provision is sufficiently clear the contract will be regarded as expressly prohibited. Generally, if the statute prohibits certain conduct, and entry into a contract constitutes such conduct, the contract will be regarded as expressly prohibited. Re Mahmoud and Ispahani35 is frequently cited36 as an example of express prohibition. The relevant provision prohibited persons from buying or selling or otherwise dealing in, any of the articles specified in a schedule, ‘except under and in accordance with the terms of a licence issued by or under the authority of the Food Controller’. Linseed oil, which was an article specified in the schedule, was the subject matter of a contract for the sale of goods between the parties. The contract was held to be prohibited, even though the plaintiff possessed a licence, because the contract provided for sale to a person (the defendant) who did not possess a licence. The prohibition was regarded as express because the contract could not be entered into, or performed, without infringing the legislation. [25-12] Express permission. In view of the importance of the issue of prohibition it is unfortunate that there is frequently no express statement that a contract infringing a legislative provision is (or is not) illegal. Where it is clear that there is no express prohibition, the issue of implied prohibition is, as we shall see,37 often difficult to resolve. Certainty would therefore be more easily obtained by a general use of express statements of the kind found in s 34 of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) which states that a ‘contract of supply of goods or services is not illegal, void or unenforceable by reason only that the supplier is guilty of an offence’ under Pt 3.1 of the Act.38
Implied Prohibition
[25-13] Object of statute. By far the most important consideration in cases where there is no express prohibition is the object of the statute. If the object of the statute can only be attained by holding that a particular class of contract is prohibited then prohibition must necessarily have been intended in respect of any contract within the class. In cases where prohibition is consistent with the object of the statute the contract will usually be prohibited, although it may be necessary to consider other factors as well. But if prohibition is not necessary in order to [page 555] further the object of the statute, the court will be reluctant to hold the contract illegal.39 As Pearce LJ explained in Archbolds (Freightage) Ltd v S Spanglett Ltd:40 If the court too readily implies that a contract is forbidden by statute, it takes it out of its own power (so far as that contract is concerned) to discriminate between guilt and innocence. But if the court makes no such implication, it still leaves itself with the general power, based on public policy, to hold those contracts unenforceable which are ex facie unlawful, and also to refuse its aid to guilty parties in respect of contracts which to the knowledge of both can only be performed in contravention of the statute … or which though apparently lawful are intended to be performed illegally or for an illegal purpose …
In focusing on the object of the statute, it may be important whether there is an intention to protect the public or merely to exact a penalty for the benefit of the revenue.41 If the statute is designed to protect the public, a contract in contravention of it will generally be regarded as prohibited. Thus, in Bradshaw v Gilbert’s (Australasian) Agency (Vic) Pty Ltd,42 s 25(1) of the Prices Regulation Act 1948 (Vic) prohibited the sale of declared goods at a price greater than the maximum fixed by regulation. This was held to make illegal a contract for the sale of goods at a price greater than that fixed, even though the goods were destined for export, because the policy of the legislation (to keep prices below a predetermined level) might be thwarted by international sales at a higher price. However, the fact that the statute protects the public is merely a factor to be considered, and is not necessarily conclusive.43 Many statutes have as their object the implementation of planning and building requirements or the promotion of safe and efficient transport. For example, in Hayes v Cable44 a contract for the construction of a swimming pool was not prohibited even though neither party obtained council approval for the
work prior to commencement.45 The contract was not illegal in formation — since subsequent approval could be applied for — and if the work was found not to comply with the statutory requirements the council was empowered to order the work to be done again. In fact, the approval of the council was obtained after the builder had issued his proceedings. The policy of the Act did not require the contract to be regarded as prohibited. In the instant case a certificate of compliance was subsequently obtained and it would have provided the defendant with an unmerited windfall if the contract had been held illegal. [page 556] Similarly, in Archbolds (Freightage) Ltd v S Spanglett Ltd46 the Road and Rail Traffic Act 1933 (UK) required a private carrier to hold an ‘A’ licence for the carriage of goods for reward, and a ‘C’ licence for the carriage of goods for or in connection with any trade or business carried on by the carrier not being carriage for reward. The defendants agreed to carry whisky for the plaintiffs for reward, but the vehicle which carried the goods had in fact only a ‘C’ licence. The plaintiffs did not know that this was the case and there was no evidence that they ought to have known that the defendants’ vehicle had only a ‘C’ licence. The contract was not expressly prohibited, and the court refused to hold that the contract was impliedly prohibited. Pearce LJ described47 the object of the Act as ‘not (in this connection) to interfere with the owner of goods or his facilities for transport; but to control those who provided the transport, with a view to promoting its efficiency … to provide an orderly and comprehensive service’. This object did not require the contract to be held to be prohibited and the object was sufficiently served by the imposition of penalties on offenders.48 [25-14] Penalty and the conduct prohibited. In Dalgety and New Zealand Loan Ltd v C Imeson Pty Ltd49 the Full Court of the Supreme Court of New South Wales said that the imposition of a penalty for the failure to observe the terms of a statute creates a presumption of prohibition. The case nevertheless illustrates the displacement of the presumption. Section 47 of the Cattle Slaughtering and Diseased Animals and Meat Act 1902 (NSW) made it an offence for any person to sell, consign or expose for sale, or supply for rations any diseased animal. A penalty, not exceeding £20, was imposed for an offence under this section. The plaintiffs conducted an auction at which, unknown to either the plaintiffs or defendants, a diseased animal was sold to the defendants. The defendants sought to withhold from the plaintiffs a sum of money equal to
its price. Their defence of illegality failed. The court found no express prohibition, but held that the presumption of implied prohibition was displaced by a consideration of the absence of guilty intent and the policy of the statute. The offence under s 47 was one of strict liability, that is, it could be committed even though there was no means of knowing that the animal was diseased. The only way a seller could be sure of not committing an offence was not to sell cattle at all. The Act was designed for the protection of the public, but it did not contemplate the termination of cattle sales generally. Moreover, in a case such as the present, where there was no guilty intent and where the parties could not reasonably know in advance of the disease, a finding that the contract was prohibited would have imposed an additional penalty. In this respect the form of the legislation was important. For persons convicted who knew, or ought to have known, that the animal dealt with was diseased, the maximum penalty was mandatory under s 48. The presence of a discretion under s 47 was an indication that the absence [page 557] of knowledge (or means of knowledge) was relevant to the impact of the Act on the contract. The form of penalty was also relied on by the High Court in Yango Pastoral Co Pty Ltd v First Chicago Australia Ltd.50 Section 8 of the Banking Act 1959 (Cth) prohibited a body corporate from carrying on ‘banking business in Australia’ unless in possession of an authority under the Act to carry on such business. A penalty of $10,000 was payable ‘for each day during which the contravention’ continued. It was assumed that the plaintiffs contravened this section, and the issue was whether this prevented the recovery of $132,600 from the defendants. This was a sum which the plaintiffs had lent to the defendants on the security of a mortgage. In addition, a guarantee had been given in respect of the mortgage. Both were assumed to have occurred in the course of banking business. The issue of illegality depended on whether the mortgage (or guarantee) was prohibited by the Act. There was no express prohibition, and the main factor which led the court to conclude that there was no implied prohibition was that the statutory penalty was quite independent of the number of banking transactions entered into on any day. Thus, the penalty was directed to the carrying on of banking business, and not imposed in respect of each banking transaction. This conclusion was equally justified if the conduct of the plaintiffs
was examined from the viewpoint of performance. Section 8 did not proscribe any manner of performance for mortgage transactions and the fact that the plaintiffs had contravened the Act by entering into the mortgage in the course of banking business did not mean that it was impliedly prohibited. [25-15] Reasonableness of result. One theme of the cases on statutory illegality is that the court should not find an implied prohibition if this would lead to an unreasonable or inconvenient result, or to an absurd conclusion. The leading case is St John Shipping Corp v Joseph Rank Ltd,51 where the plaintiffs sought to recover the balance of freight due on the carriage of a quantity of wheat from Mobile, Alabama to Birkenhead, England. The defence of illegality was raised because the plaintiffs had contravened the Merchant Shipping (Safety and Load Line Conventions) Act 1932 (UK) by so loading the vessel which carried the wheat that the vessel’s loadline was submerged by about 11 inches. The Act provided for a penalty and the master of the vessel was fined £1200. The amount of the fine was in fact less than the freight earned by overloading the vessel and the defendants, in concert with another receiver of cargo, withheld a sum equal to the freight earned. Clearly, the legislature had imposed an insufficient penalty which had not deterred contravention of the Act, but was the contract of affreightment prohibited? Devlin J held that there was no express prohibition. Nor could he find an implied prohibition in the statute. [page 558] Devlin J was impressed by how unreasonable it would have been to reach a contrary conclusion. If the defendants were right, their ability to withhold freight extended to the entire freight earned by the plaintiffs. Therefore, in a case of minor contravention, for example, if the loadline were submerged by a matter of one inch, all the cargo owners could withhold payment and the carrier would suffer an enormous penalty additional to that actually imposed by the Act. Devlin J also thought it relevant to consider the connection between the contract and the offence. A contract which had the result of submerging the loadline, for example, in loading extra cargo or stores when the vessel’s loadline was already at the water line, might well be prohibited. But a contract for carriage by a vessel which was subsequently overloaded was one step removed from the offence which had been committed, the plaintiffs having committed their offence during the performance of the contract.52
The approach is confirmed in recent decisions of the High Court which have emphasised that in many cases the appropriate conclusion will be that the statutory penalty is a sufficient penalty.53
Other Contracts Affected by Statute [25-16] Void contracts. Gaming or wagering contracts were valid at common law. However, they now illustrate classes of contract made void (but not prohibited) by statute. In Carlill v Carbolic Smoke Ball Co54 Hawkins J, after acknowledging that it is not easy to define wagering contracts nor the dividing line between them and other contracts, described a wagering contract as:55 one by which two persons, professing to hold opposite views touching the issue of a future uncertain event, mutually agree that, dependent upon the determination of that event, one shall win from the other, and that other shall pay or hand over to him, a sum of money or other stake; neither of the contracting parties having any other interest in that contract than the sum or stake he will so win or lose, there being no other real consideration for the making of such contract by either of the parties. It is essential to a wagering contract that each party may under it either win or lose, whether he will win or lose being dependent on the issue of the event, and, therefore, remaining uncertain until that issue is known. If either of the parties may win but cannot lose, or may lose but cannot win, it is not a wagering contract.
[page 559] Legislation in Australia provides that, subject to certain exceptions, a contract or agreement by way of gaming or wagering is null and void.56 However, certain gaming and wagering contracts may be prohibited, such as those involving the use of prohibited gaming devices, or betting in special circumstances, for example, betting in the streets or on sportsgrounds and with persons known to be under the age of 18 years. In certain cases, criminal penalties will be imposed for contravention. The effect of the general nullifying provision on wagering contracts was described by Rich J in Defina v Kenny57 by saying that ‘the legality of wagering contracts was not affected, but the law was no longer available for their enforcement and the parties to them were left to pay wagers or not as their sense of honour might dictate’. Accordingly, where an agent was employed but failed to bet on commission, he was not liable in damages for the amount of the prospective gains, less the prospective losses and his commission, since the wagering contracts (if made) would have been void.58 But since performance of
a void contract is lawful, if the loser of a bet pays the winner by cash or a negotiable instrument (such as a cheque) which is later honoured, title to the money or negotiable instrument passes and the loser cannot recover the money.59 Moreover, if a commission agent places bets as instructed, thereby incurring personal responsibility (though not legal liability) for them, the agent’s principal is liable to reimburse the agent once the amount of the lost bet is paid.60 [25-17] Particular contractual provisions declared void. A familiar example of statutory avoidance of particular contractual terms relates to ‘exclusion clauses’ and other forms of ‘contracting out’. For example, s 64 of the Australian Consumer Law declares certain exclusion clauses void.61 The National Credit Code62 contains several illustrations. For example, s 191(1) renders void a provision by which a person seeks to avoid or modify the effect of the Code.63 [25-18] Voidness as against a third party only. Section 122(1) of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth) illustrates voidness against a third party. It declares ‘void against the trustee in the debtor’s bankruptcy’, that is, the person appointed trustee of the bankrupt’s estate, a ‘transfer of property by a person who is insolvent … in favour of a creditor’ where the transfer ‘had the effect of giving the creditor a preference, priority or advantage over [page 560] other creditors’ where the transfer occurs within a period specified in a table to the section. Although the section limits64 the preferential transactions to conveyances or transfers of property, this includes a payment of money. A preferential transaction will often be a contract. Indeed, property is transferred, principally, by contracts. Subject to the exceptions allowed in s 122(2), the trustee of the bankrupt’s property is entitled to recover that which passed under the transaction to the preferred creditor. The property becomes available to creditors on avoidance of the transaction.65
Contracts which Infringe Public Policy
General [25-19] The concept of public policy. The refusal to enforce such contracts has been described66 as a ‘striking illustration of the subordination of private right to public interest’. A contract may be void and/or illegal if it infringes public policy.67 Some contracts, such as contracts in restraint of trade,68 are not illegal even though they may be rendered void by a rule of public policy. Other contracts, such as contracts prejudicial to the administration of justice,69 are often said to be not only void but also illegal. It is frequently unclear whether the effect of public policy is voidness alone or illegality as well because the degree of impropriety may be difficult to gauge.70 However, a contract can only be described as ‘illegal’ if the degree of impropriety is great, generally shown by the commission of a criminal offence. In Wilkinson v Osborne71 Isaacs J explained the public policy which a court is ‘entitled to apply as a test of validity to a contract is in relation to some definite and governing principle which the community as a whole has already adopted either formally by law or tacitly by its general course of corporate life’. It is therefore appropriate for the court to take judicial notice of what standards of behaviour are accepted in the community.72 The relevant public policy is, of course, the public policy of Australia (or perhaps more accurately that of the jurisdiction in which the dispute is adjudicated). It should not be assumed that all the decisions reached by (for example) the English courts are applicable in Australia. [page 561] It is arguable that the implied prohibition of contracts by statute, considered earlier,73 is based on public policy. In Vita Food Products Inc v Unus Shipping Co Ltd74 Lord Wright (for the Privy Council) said75 that the ‘rule by which contracts not expressly forbidden by statute or declared to be void are in proper cases nullified for disobedience to a statute is a rule of public policy only’. On the other hand, as a matter of analysis it is helpful to keep the cases in which a contract is impliedly prohibited by statute distinct from the common law on public policy. In any event, even though a contract is not prohibited by statute it may still be contrary to public policy.76 [25-20] The changing face of public policy. Effect is given to the idea
explained above, that public policy must relate to some ‘definite and governing principle’, by legal analysis in terms of categories or ‘heads’ of public policy. It is sometimes said77 that the courts have no power to create new heads of public policy. Even accepting such statements as correct, it is important to see that, because public policy is not fixed and stable,78 whether a contract is contrary to public policy depends on the circumstances existing at the time when the contract is entered into. Therefore, it is not to be resolved purely by reference to, for example, a case decided 100 years previously.79 The heads of public policy considered in this and the next chapter represent most of the main heads. However, the analysis does not purport to be an exhaustive description of the possible situations in which a contract may be affected by public policy.
Contracts to Commit a Legal Wrong [25-21] Requirement of intent. A contract which involves the commission of a legal wrong will be illegal if entered into with the intent of committing the wrong.80 This rule of public policy extends to the commission of a common law or statutory crime or a civil wrong. For example, a contract to defraud a third party is contrary to policy. If the necessary intent is present it does not matter that the contract, as formed, was capable of being performed in a legal manner. But if there is no guilty intent, the fact that the contract is not totally effective, for example, because of noncompliance with statute, does not render it illegal on the ground of public policy. Thus, in Hutchinson v Scott81 an agreement was reached for the purpose of searching for gold and other minerals on certain land. This agreement purported to be a lease made under s 33 of the [page 562] Mining on Private Lands Act 1894 (NSW), which dealt with the right to mine on private property. However, the Crown Lands Act 1884 (NSW) applied to the land and prohibited the conferment of any right to remove material from the land in question. It was contended that the agreement was totally void as it was executed for an illegal purpose, namely, to mine for gold on private land. However, even on the assumption that there was an unlawful purpose, the High Court held that the agreement was not unlawful because there was no evidence of an intention to
break the law. In fact, the parties had expressly stated that the lease was made under the provisions of the Mining on Private Lands Act 1894, ‘so that the parties far from evincing an intention to break the law, … clearly indicated their intention to abide by the law’.82 In deciding whether there is an intention to break the law, the knowledge of the parties is an important element where the unlawful act occurs in the performance of the contract. If the parties know the law and perform the contract in an illegal way it is far easier to infer that their intention was to break the law. On the other hand, if they had no such knowledge it may be possible to say that the contract is not illegal even though the contract is performed in the way intended and notwithstanding that the law is infringed by performance of the contract.83 However, where the contract is such that it cannot be performed without a violation of the law, it would seem that the contract is illegal whether the parties knew the law or not.84 Such a contract is usually described as being ex facie illegal. [25-22] Intention of one party to break the law. If one party only has the intention of committing a legal wrong, or knows that the contract will be performed in an illegal way, the contract will be unenforceable by that party and, to that extent at least, also illegal by reason of public policy. For example, in Alexander v Rayson85 the plaintiff agreed to let a flat to the defendant at a rent of £1200 per year. Two documents were prepared, and signed. The first was a lease, providing also for the provision of certain services, showing a rent of £450. The second was a service agreement requiring the defendant to pay £750. To an action for £300 due under the two documents the defendant pleaded that as the documents had been prepared to effect a legal wrong they were illegal. It was established that the documents had been prepared in order to defraud the Westminster City Council by obtaining a lower valuation of the property for rating purposes. The plaintiff had disclosed only the lease and succeeded, initially at least, in having the valuation of the flat reduced by reference to the defendant’s agreement to pay £450. The court held that because the plaintiff had [page 563] prepared the documents in order to commit a legal wrong he could not enforce the lease.86 Intention will, it seems, be irrelevant in cases where the contract is on its face
illegal. This issue may arise, for example, where a statutory offence is committed but it is not immediately clear whether the contract is prohibited by statute. Thus, in Archbolds (Freightage) Ltd v S Spanglett Ltd87 the carriage contract was neither expressly nor impliedly prohibited by the statute, but as an offence had been committed it was also asked whether the contract was illegal on the ground of public policy. Pearce LJ framed88 the issue as follows: ‘Must any reasonable person on hearing the terms of the contract ([with] presumed knowledge of the law) realise that it was illegal?’ Because there was nothing illegal in the terms of the contract, further knowledge, namely, knowledge that the vehicle was not properly licensed, was necessary. Because the plaintiffs were ignorant of that fact, the contract was not illegal. [25-23] Contract to commit a crime or tort. It is assumed in cases such as Alexander v Rayson89 that, as a matter of general principle, a contract to commit a crime or tort is illegal. The court will concentrate on the central purpose of the contract. It will, as Dixon and Evatt JJ said in Neal v Ayers,90 be reluctant to hold the contract illegal if the legal wrong is ‘extrinsic to the dealing which forms the foundation of the contract and of the inducing causes’. The case illustrates just such a situation. The plaintiff brought an action for deceit arising out of the plaintiff’s purchase of the lease, licence, goodwill, stock-in-trade and furniture of a hotel. During the course of negotiations the defendant represented that about £15 to £20 of the weekly takings of the hotel came from after-hours trading in contravention of the Liquor Act 1912 (NSW). In fact, of the weekly takings of £100, about £40 was taken during illegal trading. The defendant argued that the purpose or object of the contract of purchase was to break the law and was illegal on that ground. However, the High Court held that the real purpose or object was the purchase of a hotel in the ordinary course of business. It could not be said that the plaintiff purchased the hotel in order to violate the law even though the plaintiff admitted that she did intend, for a time, to carry on unlawful trading. The decision should not be seen as qualifying the law stated in Alexander v Rayson in any general way.91 For example, the position might have been different had the plaintiff entered into the contract in order to break the law and to take advantage of the illegal trading. Where the contract is entered into with the object of committing a minor statutory offence there may be room for inquiry whether the contract is [page 564]
necessarily contrary to public policy, particularly where it is common for the law not to be observed.92 For example, if A, who is in a hurry to get to the airport, contracts with B to be driven there at a speed five kilometres per hour above the legal speed limit, can A refuse to pay for the journey because the contract is illegal? Public policy may not require the conclusion of illegality to be drawn, assuming that B has not contracted to drive in an unsafe manner. The test is whether the act ‘is of such an anti-social character that the interests of the public require that the courts should for their protection decline to enforce the contract’.93
Contracts Injurious to Public Life or Foreign Relations [25-24] Promotion of corruption in public life.. In Wilkinson v Osborne94 the plaintiffs sued to recover the commission alleged to be due in connection with the sale of a tract of land to the New South Wales Government. The action failed as the plaintiffs, who were land agents in partnership, were also members of the Legislative Assembly and had agreed with the owner’s agent to use their positions to influence the government to purchase the land. The contract was contrary to public policy because of the clear conflict of interest and duty. The plaintiffs, as members of the Legislative Assembly, owed a duty to the public and ought to have maintained their impartiality. The effect of their contract with the defendant was to provide an incentive to see that the government reached (and the Legislative Assembly supported) a decision which might not have been in the public interest. In cases of this kind the court does not inquire into the extent of conflict, or whether the contract has in fact resulted in the placement of private interest in front of the public duty. It is therefore enough that the conflict of interest and duty may arise. An extreme example is Wood v Little95 where land belonging to the defendant was sold to the Closer Settlement Board of Victoria and the plaintiff, a land agent, sought to recover commission which the defendant had agreed to pay him on the sale. At the time when the defendant placed the property in the plaintiff’s hands for sale he (the plaintiff) was a shire councillor. By virtue of s 35 of the Discharged Soldiers Settlement Acts 1917 and 1919 (Vic) he therefore became a member of an advisory committee to the Board on matters relating to the selection and purchase of land. Accordingly, his public duty was in conflict with his private interest. The contract was, on that basis,
illegal irrespective of whether there was in fact any corrupt or sinister intent. Further examples can be found in cases dealing with the exercise of electoral franchise and election to public offices. For example, in Taylor v [page 565] Taylor96 the plaintiff was a candidate at an election for a seat to the Parliament of New South Wales. He sued on a promise that, in consideration that the plaintiff would retire in favour of another candidate, and would support that other candidate, the defendant would pay the expenses which the plaintiff had incurred in his candidature. The court held that the contract was contrary to public policy, even though the payment was to be made by a person who was not himself a candidate for election, because it was opposed to the public good by having a tendency to be injurious to the public. [25-25] Injuries to foreign relations. A contract which has as its object the assistance of persons acting (or intending to act) against the government of a state in friendly relations with Australia is contrary to public policy.97 Similarly, a contract which involves trading with the enemy in time of war infringes public policy and is illegal on that basis.98
Contracts Purporting to Oust the Jurisdiction of the Courts [25-26] Ouster of common law jurisdiction. Although a contract which purports to oust the jurisdiction of the courts is probably not illegal, it is contrary to public policy and therefore void or unenforceable.99 However, an agreement which is binding in honour only, and which therefore does not contemplate legal relations, does not come within the rule.100 Subject to statute,101 it is not contrary to public policy for the parties to a contract to agree to submit disputes under the contract to arbitration. The High Court said in Dobbs v National Bank of Australasia Ltd102 that a distinction must be drawn between a restriction on the right to invoke the jurisdiction of the courts and contractual provisions which give efficacy to the award of an arbitrator when made. The effect of such an ordinary submission to arbitration is
merely to make the action of a party in going to court rather than arbitration a breach of contract.103 If the contract contains an arbitration clause which requires any action to be brought on the arbitrator’s award, prior arbitration is made a condition precedent to any action on the contract. Nevertheless, in Scott v Avery104 the House of Lords decided that an arbitration clause of this type does not infringe [page 566] public policy even if it enables the arbitrator to determine whether any liability has been incurred under the contract. This suggests a general principle that a provision which makes the ability to invoke a court’s jurisdiction dependent on the occurrence of an event (such as default), will not usually be contrary to public policy.105 Unincorporated associations may be governed by rules which make the decision of an elected committee binding on the members. The jurisdiction of the committee is conferred by the rules which themselves express the contract between the members of the association. If the rules make the decision of the committee ‘final and conclusive’ this may be effective to make the committee the final arbiter of factual issues which arise for decision. But the rules cannot make the decision final and conclusive on matters of law,106 because that would be an ouster of the courts’ jurisdiction. Therefore, any rules which purport to be conclusive on matters of law, such as construction of the contract between the members of the association, will be void.107 Similarly, the certificate of a third person may be conclusive on factual matters, and an agreement to this effect does not purport to oust the jurisdiction of the courts. Thus, in Dobbs’ case, the certificate of a bank officer was conclusive as to the customer’s indebtedness to the bank pursuant to the parties’ agreement to that effect.108 The inability of the parties to a contract to oust the jurisdiction of the courts does not preclude the compromise of a contractual dispute.109 Assuming that consideration for the compromise can be found,110 it will be binding on the parties and may therefore prevent the previous contractual dispute being the subject of a decision by the courts. [25-27] Ouster of statutory jurisdiction. What is the position where a statute confers rights on an individual but does not expressly preclude that person from bargaining away his or her rights?111 In Re Morris112 Jordan CJ stated the issue
as being whether it is contrary to public policy for a person to ‘surrender’ by contract those rights which are conferred or vested in persons of one category against persons of another when the person is a member of the first category. To a large extent the resolution of this issue will depend on the nature and subject matter of the statute. In Re Morris113 the Testator’s Family Maintenance and Guardianship of Infants Act 1916 (NSW) was in issue. The Act, which conferred a power to make orders in [page 567] favour of particular categories of persons, and to provide for their maintenance out of the estate of a testator (and thereby overriding the testator’s will), was held by a majority of the court to be for the public benefit by preventing persons, such as the spouse or child of the testator, being a charge on the public. Therefore, it was contrary to public policy for the Act to be excluded by contract. This indicates that for the parties to a contract to exclude a statutory jurisdiction, the rights conferred must be of a private, rather than public, kind. Many of the cases decided in the present context have concerned contracts dealing with the maintenance payable pursuant to statute to a wife (or husband or child), following divorce. In Brooks v Burns Philp Trustee Co Ltd114 a deed was made between husband and wife shortly before the hearing of a petition by the wife for dissolution of the marriage. Clause 1 provided for the payment to the wife of weekly sums and for the assignment to her of certain insurance policies and other property. Clause 2 contained a promise by the wife to accept the terms of the deed ‘in full settlement of all claims against the husband for alimony and maintenance of any description’. Clause 2 was intended to operate immediately, and to bind the wife not to ask the court for more than was provided for by the deed, thereby extinguishing her statutory rights to maintenance and ousting the jurisdiction of the court to award a greater sum than that provided for. It was therefore held by a majority of the High Court to be invalid as contrary to public policy.115 One feature of Brooks v Burns Philp Trustee Co Ltd, which illustrates a controversy which can be found more particularly in the subsequent cases, is the failure of the court to refer in detail to the legislation governing alimony and maintenance rights. Clearly, the court proceeded on the basis that because there was no express statement in the legislation that the wife could not contract out of
her statutory rights, the decision depended merely on the application of public policy as derived from the general nature of the Act. Although they placed more emphasis on the public nature of the rights being bargained away, a similar approach was adopted by Starke J in Lieberman v Morris116 and by Windeyer J in Felton v Mulligan.117 On the other hand, Latham CJ in Lieberman felt it necessary to consider118 not only the ‘general character of the Act’ but also its ‘particular provisions’; and in Felton v Mulligan Barwick CJ said119 that the ability to agree not to enforce a statutory right depends on a ‘consideration of the statute itself’. However, there is no reason why the adoption of one approach in preference to the other should produce a different result, and it seems fair to say that where the right in issue is of a public rather than a private kind, contracting out will not be permitted unless the terms of the statute clearly indicate that that was the intention of the legislature. [page 568]
Contracts Prejudicial to the Administration of Justice [25-28] Contracts to stifle a prosecution. At least where the prosecution is of a public rather than private nature, it is contrary to public policy for a contract to be made to stifle or withdraw a prosecution. For example, in Callaghan v O’Sullivan120 the plaintiff sought to recover money which he had paid to the defendants, four police constables, in return for their promise not to prosecute the plaintiff and his daughter for the possession of uncustomed stolen goods. They did not prosecute him, but once it became clear that an inquiry was to be held based on some unrevealed source of information, he sued to recover the money paid. Irvine CJ held that the consideration for the payment of the money was illegal as it had been paid to stifle a prosecution. The contract was therefore contrary to public policy and the money could not be recovered. One basis for this rule of public policy is the interest of the public in the prosecution of criminals. Where the act in question infringes a private right, as in the case of common assault, there is scope for a contract to compromise that private right.121 For example, in Kerridge v Simmonds122 a deed included an agreement by the plaintiff to withdraw from proceedings pending in the Laverton Police Court against the defendant in consideration of a promise to pay to the
plaintiff £13 per month for an unspecified period. The summons had been issued in respect of the publication of oral defamatory matter about the plaintiff. Although the proceedings were for an indictable misdemeanour, the High Court held that the agreement in issue was not contrary to public policy. Griffith CJ said123 that the injury complained of was a ‘purely personal injury’; Barton J said124 that by no possible construction of the proceedings could they be ‘called matters in which the public had an interest’; and Higgins J said125 that he could find no ‘legal or … moral duty to prosecute or to proceed with a prosecution’. These statements indicate the relevant considerations where a private right is alleged to be at issue. The line between public and private rights is not always easy to draw and the distinction is therefore not always clear. [25-29] Maintenance. ‘Maintenance’ is the ‘giving of assistance or encouragement to one of the parties to litigation by a person who has neither an interest in the litigation nor any other motive recognised by the law as justifying his interference’.126 At one time, maintenance was a civil [page 569] wrong and also a crime.127 Although it is by no means clear that this is the position today,128 the public policy rule continues to apply.129 If justified, maintenance is not regarded as contrary to public policy. The main justification is the existence of an interest in the subject matter of the litigation as, for example, where an insurer, having a potential liability to the insured, provides an insured with funds to defend a claim by a third party.130 But a potential liability to the other litigant is not an essential requirement.131 Moreover, today the courts are more willing to countenance maintenance than their 19th century counterparts. As Lord Roskill said in Trendtex Trading Corp v Credit Suisse,132 the courts now adopt ‘an infinitely more liberal attitude towards the supporting of litigation by a third party’. The policy against maintenance has been given as an explanation of the rule of law which precludes the assignment of a ‘bare right of action’133 in contract or tort. Such an assignment has traditionally been regarded as savouring of maintenance, or as likely to lead to maintenance.134 But it is now clear that the assignment is valid if, on analysis of the whole transaction, the assignee has a
genuine commercial or proprietary interest in the success of the proceedings.135 It follows that suing for an assigned debt raises no question of maintenance.136 [25-30] Champerty. ‘Champerty’ is a particular form of maintenance, ‘namely maintenance of an action in consideration of a promise to give the maintainer a share in the proceeds or subject matter of the action’.137 Thus, if A agrees to lend $5000 to B to finance litigation by B against C, in consideration of a promise by B to pay A a sum equal to 50 per cent of the [page 570] damages recovered, the contract between A and B infringes public policy and is unenforceable. The rule extends to proceedings to establish a right to recover money on the liquidation of a company, and generally to all contentious proceedings where property which is in dispute becomes the subject of a contract to share in the proceeds of the proceedings. However, in Giles v Thompson138 the House of Lords suggested that an agreement for maintenance should be treated as infringing public policy on the basis that it is champertous only if there is a wanton and officious intermeddling with the disputes of others.139 In Re Trepca Mines Ltd (No 2)140 a solicitor brought an action to recover fees and disbursements from his client. The client had been unsuccessful in a claim to recover a debt in the liquidation of a company, but successfully appealed with the help of finance from a third person in return for a promise to pay the third person 25 per cent of any sums recovered. The agreement between the client and the third party was clearly champertous and the issue was whether the solicitor was implicated in the agreement. The court said that to disentitle the solicitor it had to be established that he had actively participated in the champertous agreement. On the facts he was found to have been aware of the agreement. Moreover, the solicitor agreed to receive the proceeds of the action in order to distribute them in accordance with the champertous agreement. In these circumstances the contract of retainer, between the solicitor and his client, was contrary to public policy because it was an agreement to abet the doing of a series of illegal acts. Legislation and judicial decision continue to narrow the scope of the public policy rule. For example: solicitors — under the general law, provided that the solicitor does not bargain
with the client for a contingency fee, a solicitor may act for a person who has no means to pay otherwise than by succeeding in the claim;141 rules of court — court rules may confine the scope of the public policy rule in its application to a legal practitioner’s contract with a client, for example, by permitting contingency fees;142 and bankruptcy — where a person becomes bankrupt, or a company goes into liquidation, the statutory powers of the trustee in bankruptcy or liquidator include entry into a contract which would otherwise be contrary to public policy on the basis of being prejudicial to the administration of justice.143 [page 571]
Immoral Contracts [25-31] Sexual immorality. The classic illustration of the proposition that a contract is void and illegal if sexually immoral is Pearce v Brooks.144 The plaintiffs supplied the defendant with a new miniature brougham145 pursuant to a contract of hire. The defendant returned the vehicle and failed to pay a forfeit pursuant to the contract. The defence to the action was illegality, namely, that to the knowledge of the plaintiffs the defendant was a common prostitute, and the brougham was to be used to assist her in carrying out her immoral vocation. The jury found that the carriage was used by the defendant as part of her display to attract men. Moreover, although there was no direct evidence that the plaintiffs knew that the brougham was to be used by the defendant to prosecute her trade, and no evidence that they expected payment to be made out of her earnings, the jury found that the plaintiffs knew of the defendant’s purpose. The court held the contract to be illegal, on the ground of sexual immorality, and said that it was of no moment whether the plaintiffs expected to be paid out of the proceeds of the defendant’s trade. The jury’s finding on the plaintiffs’ knowledge could be sustained. Bramwell B said146 in argument that the ‘inference that a prostitute … required an ornamental brougham for the purposes of her calling, was as natural a one as that a medical man would want a brougham for the purpose of visiting his patients’. It would seem that the rule of public policy against immoral contracts does not extend beyond sexual immorality.147 Most of the modern cases involve an alleged illicit cohabitation.
[25-32] Illicit cohabitation. The courts have, traditionally at least, treated as contrary to public policy a contract providing for or relating to illicit cohabitation. Although it may be true to say that a contract to pay money in consideration of an immoral association is still contrary to public policy,148 the recent cases indicate that a contract is not to be regarded as contrary to public policy merely because the parties to the contract are living together in a de facto relationship. In Andrews v Parker149 the plaintiff and defendant lived together as man and wife in a house owned by the plaintiff. When they met the plaintiff was a widower aged 55 and the defendant a married woman aged about 41. Subsequently, a de facto relationship commenced. A few months later the plaintiff agreed to transfer title in his house to the defendant. This agreement was subject to certain terms including a requirement that the defendant reconvey the title to the house if she returned to her husband. After another four months the plaintiff signed a memorandum of transfer. Although this expressed as consideration the payment of $6000, the [page 572] plaintiff did not in fact receive any such sum. A few months later the defendant was reunited with her husband and asked the plaintiff to leave the house. The defendant and her husband expressed a willingness to pay $4000 for the house. The plaintiff left the house, and opened a bank account for payment of the money, but the defendant and her husband paid only an initial sum of $10. Stable J held that the original agreement to transfer the house was not contrary to public policy; it did not bring about a state of extramarital cohabitation because one already existed. That agreement provided for the retransfer of the title to the house in certain events and, as one of those events had occurred, the plaintiff was entitled to enforce the contract.150 In addition, Stable J said that the court was not to judge the actions of the parties in the light of 19th century cases. Rather, the court was bound to apply the public policy of the day and to consider contemporary moral standards. Stable J said that, if there was an immoral consideration, judged by today’s standards the immorality was not such as to deprive the plaintiff of his right to enforce the contract. If the parties to a de facto relationship contemplate the termination of that relationship, by marriage or formal separation, an agreement between them may
be enforced. Thus, in Seidler v Schallhofer151 the plaintiff and defendant, although unmarried, commenced living together in 1974. Early in 1978 it was agreed that they would buy a house and live in it in order to enable them to decide whether marriage should take place. They executed a detailed agreement in March 1978 and the purchase of the house which they had agreed to buy was completed in May. Title to the property was then registered in their names as joint tenants. As part of the purchase the plaintiff had mortgaged her interest to the defendant to secure the repayment of $20,000. Of the purchase price of $49,500, all was furnished by the defendant except $4640, which the plaintiff had contributed. The $20,000 was, in effect, lent by the defendant in order to ensure that the respective contributions were equal. In January 1979 the plaintiff left the house. The issue was whether the 1978 agreement was void as being contrary to public policy. On the assumption that the agreement provided for the continuance of an existing and illicit cohabitation, the court held that the agreement did not infringe public policy. Hope JA relied on the fact that the agreement was reached long after the illicit cohabitation had commenced, and the fact that the agreement contemplated the termination of that cohabitation (by marriage or separation) after six months. In addition, Hope JA pointed out152 that the ‘agreement did not involve meretricious sexual services, but a sexual relationship as part only of a wider relationship’. Having regard to the recognition and acceptance by the community and the legislature of de facto relationships, it would have been wrong to hold the present agreement to be contrary to public policy. Reynolds JA agreed. Hutley JA, while [page 573] reasoning along slightly different, and at times broader lines, reached the same conclusion. In several jurisdictions the rule of public policy has been abrogated.153 Thus, in New South Wales it is now provided that, notwithstanding any rule of public policy to the contrary, two persons who are not married to each other may enter into a domestic relationship agreement or termination agreement.154 Such an agreement is enforceable in accordance with the law of contract.155
Contracts Prejudicial to the Status of Marriage [25-33] Contracts prejudicial to the status of marriage. A contract infringes public policy if it is prejudicial to the status of marriage. The marital relationship is the concern of the public because of the legal status attached to it, the obligation of loyalty between the spouses, the public interest in the status of children and the fact that the rules for its dissolution have been expressed by statutory enactments. This head of public policy is related to the prohibition on immoral contracts but distinguishable from it on the ground that a contract may be prejudicial to the status of marriage even though it does not involve the encouragement of sexual immorality.156 An agreement for the future separation of husband and wife is contrary to the public policy of the common law.157 However, if the parties have already separated, or have determined to separate at once, the agreement is valid158 as it deals with the consequences of separation and does not itself provide for separation. As with other heads of public policy, the recent cases adopt a more lenient attitude reflecting the changing nature of public policy. Moreover, the impact of legislation such as the Marriage Act 1961 (Cth) and the Family Law Act 1975 (Cth) must be borne in mind, particularly when the old cases are being considered. 1.
For discussion of the concept of ‘voidness’ see [20-15].
2.
For discussion of the concept of ‘unenforceable’ see [9-19].
3.
For supervening illegality see [33-21]–[33-24].
4.
See generally Chapter 9.
5.
See generally Chapter 15.
6.
See generally Chapter 27.
7.
See M P Furmston, ‘The Analysis of Illegal Contracts’ (1966) 16 Univ of Toronto LJ 267.
8.
See Fitzgerald v F J Leonhardt Pty Ltd (1997) 189 CLR 215 at 231-2; 143 ALR 569 at 580.
9.
See, eg [27-21]–[27-24]. It is also difficult to reconcile all the cases on statutory illegality. See generally [25-07]–[25-18].
10.
(1947) 48 SR (NSW) 243 at 245. See also North Western Salt Co Ltd v Electrolytic Alkali Co Ltd [1914] AC 461 at 469, 475-6, 477; Gozzard v McKell (1931) 32 SR (NSW) 39; Varley v Spatt [1955] VLR 403; Re Rosemac Pty Ltd’s Caveat (1992) [1994] 1 Qd R 137.
11.
See, eg Re Mahmoud and Ispahani [1921] 2 KB 716; and [25-22].
12.
See [27-05].
13.
Cf Bank of India v Trans Continental Commodity Merchants Ltd [1982] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 427 at 434.
14.
See also North Western Salt Co Ltd v Electrolytic Alkali Co Ltd [1914] AC 461 at 477-8; G C
Dickson & Yorston (Builders) Pty Ltd v Hattam [1935] VLR 168; Ford v Bartley (1956) 57 SR (NSW) 281; United City Merchants (Investments) Ltd v Royal Bank of Canada [1983] 1 AC 168. 15.
See further [25-21]–[25-23].
16.
[1957] 1 QB 267 at 283 (approved Yango Pastoral Co Pty Ltd v First Chicago Australia Ltd (1978) 139 CLR 410 at 413, 423; 21 ALR 585).
17.
See also Nelson v Nelson (1995) 184 CLR 538 at 552, 611; 132 ALR 133 (classifications also applicable to express trusts).
18.
See [25-07]–[25-15].
19.
See [25-17].
20.
See [25-18].
21.
See [25-16]. Cf Miller v Miller (2011) 242 CLR 446 at 457-8; 275 ALR 611 at 617-18; [2011] HCA 9 at [24]-[25].
22.
See generally Chapter 26.
23.
See generally Chapter 27.
24.
See, eg Yango Pastoral Co Pty Ltd v First Chicago Australia Ltd (1978) 139 CLR 410 at 414.
25.
See Nelson v Nelson (1995) 184 CLR 538 at 552, 554, 581, 594; Fitzgerald v F J Leonhardt Pty Ltd (1997) 189 CLR 215 at 218-19, 227, 242-5.
26.
[1957] 1 QB 267 at 283.
27.
[1957] 1 QB 267 at 283.
28.
[1921] 2 KB 716 (see further [25-11]).
29.
See, eg Australian Broadcasting Corp v Redmore Pty Ltd (1989) 166 CLR 454 at 462; 84 ALR 199.
30.
The leading case is St John Shipping Corp v Joseph Rank Ltd [1957] 1 QB 267 (see [25-15]).
31.
[1964] NSWR 638 (see further [25-14]). For other illustrations see Bassin v Standen (1945) 46 SR (NSW) 16 at 18; Yango Pastoral Co Pty Ltd v First Chicago Australia Ltd (1978) 139 CLR 410 at 413.
32.
(1929) 43 CLR 91. See also Sutton v Zullo Enterprises Pty Ltd (1998) [2000] 2 Qd R 196 at 203.
33.
See Braham v Walker (1961) 104 CLR 366; Gaye (No 1) Pty Ltd v Allan Rowlands Holdings Pty Ltd (1993) 114 ALR 341.
34.
It may also be difficult to determine whether the issue is illegality or frustration of contract. Cf Gamerco SA v ICM/Fair Warning (Agency) Ltd [1995] 1 WLR 1226 (see [33-21]).
35.
[1921] 2 KB 716. Cf Metcalf v Permanent Building Society (1993) 10 WAR 145.
36.
See, eg Archbolds (Freightage) Ltd v S Spanglett Ltd [1961] 1 QB 374 at 385; Salahuddin Ahmed, ‘Consequences of Illegality on Contracts in Contravention of Statutes’ (1984) 13 Uni of Qld LJ 219 at 223-4. But see Ross v Ratcliff (1988) 91 FLR 66 at 67.
37.
See [25-13]–[25-15].
38.
Cf SCF Finance Co Ltd v Masri (No 2) [1987] 1 QB 1002 (contravention not to ‘affect any civil liability’).
39.
See PT Ltd v Maradona Pty Ltd (1992) 25 NSWLR 643 at 652. Contrast Hurst v Vestcorp Ltd (1988) 12 NSWLR 394.
40.
[1961] 1 QB 374 at 387.
41.
See, eg Marks v Jolly (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 351 at 357; Yango Pastoral Co Pty Ltd v First Chicago
Australia Ltd (1978) 139 CLR 410 at 414, 431. 42.
(1952) 86 CLR 209. See also Pretorius Pty Ltd v Muir & Neil Pty Ltd [1976] 1 NSWLR 213; Australian Broadcasting Corp v Redmore Pty Ltd (1989) 166 CLR 454 at 462.
43.
See, eg Shaw v Groom [1970] 2 QB 504; Yango Pastoral Co Pty Ltd v First Chicago Australia Ltd (1978) 139 CLR 410 at 414.
44.
(1962) 62 SR (NSW) 1; [1961] NSWR 610. See also Doug Rea Enterprises Pty Ltd v Hymix Australia Pty Ltd [1987] 2 Qd R 495; Freedom Homes Pty Ltd v Botros [2000] 2 Qd R 377 at 381.
45.
As required by the Local Government Act 1919 (NSW).
46.
[1961] 1 QB 374.
47.
[1961] 1 QB 374 at 386.
48.
Contrast Buckland v Massey [1985] 1 Qd R 502 (statute concerned with road-worthiness of motor vehicles).
49.
[1964] NSWR 638.
50.
(1978) 139 CLR 410. See also Farrow Mortgage Services Pty Ltd v Edgar (1993) 114 ALR 1 at 18. Contrast Cornelius v Phillips [1918] AC 199; Ambassador Refrigeration Pty Ltd v Trocadero Building and Investment Co Pty Ltd [1968] 1 NSWR 75. Cf Phoenix General Insurance Co of Greece SA v Halvanon Insurance Co Ltd [1988] 1 QB 216 (see Andrew Stewart, ‘Insurance Contracts and Illegality’ (1988) 1 ILJ 63).
51.
[1957] 1 QB 267. See also Shaw v Groom [1970] 2 QB 504.
52.
In Yango Pastoral Co Pty Ltd v First Chicago Australia Ltd (1978) 139 CLR 410 at 414-15 it was pointed out that it would have been inconvenient and unreasonable to treat all banking contracts as impliedly prohibited by the Act in issue since that might have resulted in depositors being unable to recover their money from a corporation carrying on banking business in contravention of the Act. Recent developments in the law of restitution (see [27-27]) suggest that lenders would probably have been entitled to recover their money.
53.
See Nelson v Nelson (1995) 184 CLR 538 at 570, 613, 616; Fitzgerald v F J Leonhardt Pty Ltd (1997) 189 CLR 215 at 227, 246, 251.
54.
[1892] 2 QB 484 (affirmed [1893] 1 QB 256).
55.
[1892] 2 QB 484 at 490. See also Morley v Richardson (1942) 65 CLR 512 at 522-3, 524; Petranker v Brown [1984] 2 NSWLR 177 at 194; National Mutual Holdings Pty Ltd v Sentry Corp (1989) 87 ALR 539 at 572.
56.
ACT: Unlawful Gambling Act 2009, s 47; NSW: Unlawful Gambling Act 1998, s 56; NT: Unlawful Betting Act, s 4; Qld: Racing Act 2002, s 341; SA: Lottery and Gaming Act 1936, ss 50, 50A; Tas: Racing Regulation Act 2004, s 103; Vic: Gambling Regulation Act 2003, s 2.4.1; WA: Gaming and Betting (Contracts and Securities) Act 1985, s 4.
57.
(1946) 72 CLR 164 at 171. See also Lipkin Gorman v Karpnale Ltd [1991] 2 AC 548.
58.
Cohen v Kittell (1889) 22 QBD 680.
59.
Bridger v Savage (1885) 15 QBD 363 at 367.
60.
Read v Anderson (1882) 10 QBD 100 (affirmed (1884) 13 QBD 779).
61.
See also [14-23].
62.
National Consumer Credit Protection Act 2009 (Cth), Sch 1.
63.
See also Caltex Oil (Australia) Pty Ltd v Best (1990) 170 CLR 516; 97 ALR 217 (effect of Petroleum Retail Marketing Franchise Act 1980 (Cth), s 7).
64.
See also Bankruptcy Act 1966 (Cth), ss 120 (undervalued transactions), 121 (transfers to defeat creditors).
65.
See Cannane v J Cannane Pty Ltd (in liq) (1998) 192 CLR 557 at 566, 574; 153 ALR 163 at 168, 174.
66.
A v Hayden (1984) 156 CLR 532 at 559; 56 ALR 82.
67.
See further on the appropriate description [27-02].
68.
See generally Chapter 26.
69.
See generally [25-28]–[25-30].
70.
See [27-02].
71.
(1915) 21 CLR 89 at 97 (italics supplied). See also A v Hayden (1984) 156 CLR 532 at 571. Cattanach v Melchior (2003) 215 CLR 1 at 34-5; 199 ALR 131 at 153.
72.
The court may have regard to legislation; see Seidler v Schallhofer [1982] 2 NSWLR 80 (see [2532]); Gollan v Nugent (1988) 166 CLR 18 at 49; 82 ALR 193; Green v Green (1989) 17 NSWLR 343 at 358.
73.
See [25-07]–[25-15].
74.
[1939] AC 277.
75.
[1939] AC 277 at 293.
76.
See further [25-22].
77.
See, eg Wilkinson v Osborne (1915) 21 CLR 89 at 96-7. But cf Fender v St John-Mildmay [1938] AC 1 at 11.
78.
See Fitzgerald v F J Leonhardt Pty Ltd (1997) 189 CLR 215 at 248-9.
79.
See, eg Seidler v Schallhofer [1982] 2 NSWLR 80; R (Factortame Ltd) v Secretary of State for Transport Local Government and the Regions (No 8) [2003] QB 381 at 399.
80.
See [25-04].
81.
(1905) 3 CLR 359.
82.
(1905) 3 CLR 359 at 369. See also Holidaywise Koala Pty Ltd v Queenslodge Pty Ltd [1977] VR 164 at 176-7.
83.
Cf Fire and All Risks Insurance Co Ltd v Powell [1966] VR 513 at 520, 525, 527-8.
84.
See Waugh v Morris (1873) LR 8 QB 202 at 208; J M Allan (Merchandising) Ltd v Cloke [1963] 2 QB 340; Holidaywise Koala Pty Ltd v Queenslodge Pty Ltd [1977] VR 164 at 174-5.
85.
[1936] 1 KB 169. See also McCarthy Bros (Milk Vendors) Pty Ltd v Dairy Farmers’ Co-operative Milk Co Ltd (1945) 45 SR (NSW) 266; T P Rich Investments Pty Ltd v Calderon [1964] NSWR 709. Contrast Gray v Pastorelli [1987] WAR 174; Yaroomba Beach Development Co Pty Ltd v Coeur de Lion Investments Pty Ltd (1989) 18 NSWLR 398.
86.
But cf Iannotti v Corsaro (1984) 36 SASR 127 (see Neil Francey (1986) 60 ALJ 637).
87.
[1961] 1 QB 374 (see [25-13]).
88.
[1961] 1 QB 374 at 387. See also Waugh v Morris (1873) LR 8 QB 202.
89.
[1936] 1 KB 169 (see [25-22]). See also Scott v Brown Doering McNab & Co [1892] 2 QB 724.
90.
(1940) 63 CLR 524 at 532.
91.
See McCarthy Bros (Milk Vendors) Pty Ltd v Dairy Farmers’ Co-operative Milk Co Ltd (1945) 45 SR (NSW) 266 at 269.
92.
Cf St John Shipping Corp v Joseph Rank Ltd [1957] 1 QB 267 at 292.
93.
Fire and All Risks Insurance Co Ltd v Powell [1966] VR 513 at 523. There is a fine line between such cases and those in which the question is whether public policy requires the court to refuse to give effect to a cause of action which would otherwise be available. See [27-01].
94.
(1915) 21 CLR 89.
95.
(1921) 29 CLR 564. Cf Horne v Barber (1920) 27 CLR 494 on the authority of which Wood v Little was decided, but which was doubted by Higgins J and perhaps also by Starke J.
96.
(1890) 11 NSWR 323.
97.
See, eg Foster v Driscoll [1929] 1 KB 470. And see Defence Act 1903 (Cth), s 118.
98.
See, eg Ertel Bieber & Co v Rio Tinto Co Ltd [1918] AC 260 (see [33-23]).
99.
See Soulsbury v Soulsbury [2008] 1 Fam 1 at 7; [2007] EWCA Civ 969 at [17] (void). But a contract which ousts the jurisdiction of a foreign court may be valid: Addison v Brown [1954] 2 All ER 213.
100. See Rose & Frank Co v J R Crompton & Bros Ltd [1925] AC 445; Dobbs v National Bank of Australasia Ltd (1935) 53 CLR 643 at 652 and generally Chapter 8. 101. See, eg Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth), s 43. 102. (1935) 53 CLR 643 at 652, 656. 103. A liability in damages may therefore result; see Doleman & Sons v Ossett Corp [1912] 3 KB 257 at 267-8, 270-1; Mantovani v Carapelli SpA [1980] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 375. But that does not prevent enforcement of the agreement to arbitrate. See, eg Commercial Arbitration Act 2010 (NSW), ss 17, 17J (interim measures). 104. (1856) 5 HLC 811; 10 ER 1121. For the history see D Rhidian Thomas, ‘Scott v Avery Agreements’ [1991] LMCLQ 508. 105. See Hong Kong Bank of Australia Ltd v Larobi Pty Ltd (1991) 23 NSWLR 593. 106. See, eg Lee v Showmen’s Guild of Great Britain [1952] 2 QB 329 at 343. 107. See, eg Baker v Jones [1954] 2 All ER 553. 108. Other, more common, examples include certificates of accountants, architects and engineers, assessing matters such as work done under building contracts and the valuation of assets. See, eg South Australian Railways Commissioner v Egan (1973) 47 ALJR 140; Jones v Sherwood Computer Services Plc [1992] 1 WLR 277. 109. See, eg Lieberman v Morris (1944) 69 CLR 69 at 80. 110. See generally [6-50]–[6-55]. 111. See J W Carter, Elisabeth Peden and Kristin Stammer, ‘Contractual Restrictions and Rights under Copyright Legislation’ (2007) 23 JCL 32. 112. (1943) 43 SR (NSW) 352 at 356. 113. Approved in Lieberman v Morris (1944) 69 CLR 69. 114. (1969) 121 CLR 432. 115. See further [27-30]. See also O’Loughlin v O’Loughlin [1958] VR 649. 116. See (1944) 69 CLR 69 at 86-7. Cf Commonwealth of Australia v Verwayen (1990) 170 CLR 394 at 404-5, 456; 95 ALR 321. 117. (1971) 124 CLR 367, especially at 390. 118. See (1944) 69 CLR 69 at 79.
119. See (1971) 124 CLR 367 at 377. Cf In The Marriage of Burge (1985) 10 Fam LR 514. 120. [1925] VLR 664. See also Clegg v Wilson (1932) 32 SR (NSW) 109; Public Service Employees Credit Union Co-operative Ltd v Campion (1984) 75 FLR 131; 56 ACTR 39. 121. Cf PT Garuda Indonesia Ltd v Grellman (1992) 107 ALR 199 at 216 (uncertainty in relation to embezzlement). 122. (1906) 4 CLR 253. 123. (1906) 4 CLR 253 at 260. 124. (1906) 4 CLR 253 at 262. 125. (1906) 4 CLR 253 at 264. 126. Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th ed, 1974, Vol 9, para 400. 127. See Neville v London ‘Express’ Newspaper Ltd [1919] AC 368 at 386, 398; Magic Menu Systems Pty Ltd v AFA Facilitation Pty Ltd (1997) 142 ALR 198 at 205-6. 128. See Clyne v New South Wales Bar Association (1960) 104 CLR 186 at 203; Brew v Whitlock [1967] VR 449; Roux v Australian Broadcasting Commission [1992] 2 VR 577 at 605-6. For an illustration of statutory abolition see Civil Liability Act 2002 (NSW), Sch 2, cl 2 (re-enacting Maintenance, Champerty and Barratry Abolition Act 1993 (NSW), ss 4, 6). 129. Generally, where the offence and the tortious liability have been abolished by statute the public policy rule has been preserved. See, eg Civil Liability Act 2002 (NSW), Sch 2, cl 2 (re-enacting Maintenance, Champerty and Barratry Abolition Act 1993 (NSW), ss 4, 6). 130. See Schultz v Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corp Ltd (1923) 23 SR (NSW) 153; Halliday v High Performance Personnel Pty Ltd (1993) 113 ALR 637 at 640. 131. Roux v Australian Broadcasting Commission [1992] 2 VR 577 at 607. Thus, another justification is the poverty of the person maintained. See Stevens v Keogh (1946) 72 CLR 1 (libel action). 132. [1982] AC 679 at 702. 133. ‘No single phrase’, said Lloyd LJ in Brownton Ltd v Edward Moore Inbucon Ltd [1985] 3 All ER 499 at 506-7, ‘has given rise to greater confusion’. See also [17-12]. 134. See Glegg v Bromley [1912] 3 KB 474 at 489-90; Re Kenneth Wright Distributors Pty Ltd (in liq); W J Vine Pty Ltd v Hall [1973] VR 161 at 165, 166. See Y L Tan, ‘Champertous Contracts and Assignments’ (1990) 106 LQR 656. See further [17-28]. 135. See, eg Beard v Baulkham Hills Shire Council (1986) 7 NSWLR 273 at 281; Equuscorp Pty Ltd (formerly Equus Financial Services Ltd) v Haxton (2012) 286 ALR 12; [2012] HCA 7. See generally on assignment Chapter 17. 136. See Camdex International Ltd v Bank of Zambia [1998] QB 22. In Giles v Thompson [1994] 1 AC 142, the view is expressed that the rule ought now to be regarded as an independent one. 137. Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th ed, 1974, Vol 9, para 400 (approved Trendtex Trading Corp v Credit Suisse [1982] AC 679 at 694). See also Giles v Thompson [1994] 1 AC 142. 138. [1994] 1 AC 142. 139. But cf NSW Law Reform Commission, Barratry, Maintenance and Champerty, Discussion Paper No 36, 1994. 140. [1962] Ch 511. But see In the Marriage of Sheehan (1991) 104 FLR 57 at 65-6. 141. See Clyne v New South Wales Bar Association (1960) 104 CLR 186 at 203. 142. Cf Awwad v Geraghty & Co (a firm) [2001] QB 570 (see Neil Andrews [2000] CLJ 265; Adrian
Walters (2000) 116 LQR 371; Nelson Enonchong (2000) 116 LQR 377); Hollins v Russell [2003] 1 WLR 2487 at 2499. 143. See, eg Citicorp Australia Ltd v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy (1996) 141 ALR 667 at 675-6. 144. (1866) LR 1 Ex 213. 145. A one horse closed carriage with two or four wheels, for two or four persons (OED). 146. See (1866) LR 1 Ex 213 at 215. 147. Cf Barac v Farnell (1994) 125 ALR 241. 148. See, eg Fender v St John-Mildmay [1938] AC 1 at 42. 149. [1973] Qd R 93. 150. See further [27-12]. 151. [1982] 2 NSWLR 80. See Frank Bates, ‘Private Law and Public Policy: An Extrapolation from Seidler v Schallhofer’ (1983) 57 ALJ 460. 152. [1982] 2 NSWLR 80 at 88-9. 153. ACT: Domestic Relationships Act 1994, Pt 4; NSW: Property (Relationships) Act 1984, Pt 4; NT: De Facto Relationships Act 1991, ss 3, 44, 45; SA: Domestic Partners Property Act 1996, Pt 2. 154. See Property (Relationships) Act 1984 (NSW), s 45(1). The Act defines ‘domestic relationship’ to include a de facto relationship. 155. See Property (Relationships) Act 1984 (NSW), s 46. This is subject to the provisions of Pt 4. 156. See, eg Hermann v Charlesworth [1905] 2 KB 123; Minister for Education v Oxwell [1966] WAR 39 at 42. 157. See Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th ed, 1974, Vol 9, para 413. 158. See, eg Fender v St John-Mildmay [1938] AC 1 at 24, 44; Money v Money (No 2) [1966] 1 NSWR 348. If necessary, a short period of time between the agreement and separation will be ignored: Re Field and the Conveyancing Act [1968] 1 NSWR 210.
[page 574]
Chapter 26
Contracts in Restraint of Trade [26-01] Definition. In Petrofina (Gt Britain) Ltd v Martin,1 Diplock LJ defined a contract in restraint of trade as ‘one in which a party (the covenantor) agrees with any other party (the covenantee) to restrict his liberty in the future to carry on trade with other persons not parties to the contract in such manner as he chooses’. Although this description received a measure of support in Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd,2 Lord Wilberforce pointed out3 that often in the cases the words ‘restraint of trade’ are used ‘indifferently to denote, on the one hand in a broad popular sense, any contract which limits the free exercise of trade or business, and, on the other hand, as a term of art covering those contracts which are to be regarded as offending a rule of public policy’. As we shall see,4 Diplock LJ’s definition may be too broad if understood as a description of the latter. The following examples may be given in order to indicate, in a general way, the types of contracts involved: A partnership deed between the members of a medical practice might include an agreement that any partner leaving the practice is not to practise within a five-kilometre radius of the existing surgery for a period of three years. The vendor of a business might contract not to set up the same (or a similar) business within a 10-kilometre radius of the location of the business sold. A garage proprietor might agree to take supplies of petroleum products exclusively from one supplier for a period of five years. An employee might contract to give his or her services exclusively to an employer, and not to work for a rival employer within a five-kilometre radius for a period of one year after termination of the employment. Although it is convenient to speak of a ‘contract’ in restraint of trade, it is more accurate to speak in terms of a covenant5 in restraint of trade. So, the
[page 575] definition stated above applies to any contractual term amounting to a restriction of the type referred to. However, the restraint of trade doctrine may apply even though the ‘covenantee’ has promised to do an act, for example, to pay pension benefits, provided the ‘covenantor’ does not do an act, such as entering a particular trade. Although in such a case there is no promise by the ‘covenantor’ not to enter the trade, a restraint may still be found due to the contingency.6 Moreover, the restraint need not be found in a contract between the covenantor and covenantee. Thus, in Buckley v Tutty7 the plaintiff, a professional footballer under contract with the Balmain District Rugby League Football Club, was subject to a restraint contained in the rules of the New South Wales Rugby League, an unincorporated association. It was because those rules operated in unreasonable restraint of trade that the High Court held the restraint to be unenforceable, and not because there was no contract between the plaintiff and the League. Buckley v Tutty also illustrates the width of the concept of ‘trade’ in the context of employment. The doctrine applies to employment generally and, as the High Court said,8 the ‘fact that football is a sport does not mean that a man paid to play football is not engaged in employment’.
Some Basic Questions How Does the Law Work? [26-02] Contract in restraint of trade prima facie void. In Nordenfelt v Maxim Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Co Ltd9 Lord Macnaghten expressed the ‘general rule’ as being that a contract in restraint of trade is void. This statement of principle has been accepted in the subsequent cases,10 with the result that a covenant which operates in restraint of trade is presumed to be void. The presumption can, however, be rebutted; that is, the restraint may be justified. [26-03] Justification of a restraint. The way in which a restraint is to be justified was explained by Lord Macnaghten in Nordenfelt v Maxim Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Co Ltd:11
[page 576] [R]estraints of trade and interferences with individual liberty of action may be justified by the special circumstances of a particular case. It is a sufficient justification, and indeed it is the only justification, if the restriction is reasonable — reasonable, that is, in reference to the interests of the parties concerned and reasonable in reference to the interests of the public, so framed and so guarded as to afford adequate protection to the party in whose favour it is imposed, while at the same time it is in no way injurious to the public.
Lord Macnaghten described this as the ‘fair result’ of the prior authorities, and the subsequent decisions have endorsed his statement of the law.12 The distinction between ‘reasonable’ restraints and ‘unreasonable’ restraints is therefore that a reasonable restraint will be enforced, while a restraint which is unreasonable will not. Thus, if the restraint is found to be unreasonable, the clause imposing the restraint is unenforceable and (perhaps) void. But the contract is not thereby rendered illegal, and the contract as a whole is not unenforceable or void if the infringing clause is severable.13 However, no issue of reasonableness arises if the person bound by the restraint chooses not to object to it: it is not unlawful for the parties to keep to their contract.14 Like the other public policy rules, the restraint of trade rule represents a restriction on the general rule of freedom of contract. A contract in restraint of trade is prima facie void, notwithstanding the general principle of freedom of contract, because of the public interest in freedom of competition and trade. On the other hand, the ability to justify a contract which is otherwise contrary to public policy sets this head of public policy apart from those considered in the previous chapter. It is probably true to say that the courts find the tension between freedom of contract and considerations of public policy more acute in this area, and correspondingly more difficult to resolve, than in respect of the other heads of public policy. The cases indicate that the decision whether to enforce a contract in restraint of trade will depend not only on the nature of the restraint, but also on the nature of the contract. Thus, the rule of public policy is weaker in respect of contracts for the sale of a business than in employment contracts.15 In the former context there is a tendency to allow a greater freedom of contract than in the latter, and a restraint clause in an employment contract is more likely to be held to be unjustified, particularly if it is found to be ‘penal’ in nature.16 At common law,17 a covenant in restraint of trade which is found to be unreasonable is not enforceable even though the covenantor has acted in a
[page 577] way which could have been the subject of a valid restraint. For example, in Papastravou v Gavan18 the plaintiffs purchased the defendants’ hairdressing business under a contract which contained an undertaking that the defendants would not, for a period of three years, be employed, interested or directly or indirectly concerned, whether as proprietors or otherwise, in a hairdressing business within a radius of three miles of the premises sold. After about eight months the defendants opened a hairdressing business only about 350 yards away from the business sold. Because the undertaking went beyond what was reasonable, the plaintiffs were unable to obtain relief,19 even though, had the restraint been limited to, say, a 500-yard radius, it would undoubtedly have been enforceable.
Is There a Restraint? [26-04] Existence of restraint. In Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd20 Lord Wilberforce emphasised the need to segregate two issues when applying the rule of public policy. The first issue is whether a restraint actually exists. The second issue, which need only be resolved if a restraint has been found, is whether the restraint is reasonable. This may sound obvious enough, but Lord Wilberforce saw a danger of fusing the two issues, by speaking of a clause which is in ‘undue restraint of trade’. In fact, in some cases, deciding whether a restraint exists is the most difficult of the many issues raised by the restraint of trade doctrine.21 Generally, the courts have said that for a restraint to be found the covenantor must have given up some pre-existing freedom. Thus, in the Esso case Lord Reid said22 that a ‘restraint of trade’ implies that a person has contracted ‘to give up some freedom which otherwise he would have had’. And in the same case Lord Pearce said23 it would be ‘intolerable’ for a person who buys or leases land subject to a restraint, on terms which are ‘more favourable’ because of the restraint, to be able to ‘repudiate’ the restraint while retaining the benefit of the purchase or lease. In the final analysis, whether a restraint exists depends on the ‘practical working’24 of the contract rather than the form of the clauses in issue. Thus, although in the Esso case Lord Reid said25 that ‘no one has ever suggested’ that exclusive service contracts are in restraint of trade ‘except in very unusual circumstances’, subsequent decisions such as A Schroeder Music
Publishing Co Ltd v Macaulay26 indicate that those circumstances sometimes exist. [page 578] Moreover, the view that the test for the existence of a restraint is whether the covenantor has given up some pre-existing freedom has been challenged in the more recent cases.27 There is some support for a ‘trading society test’. Under this test what would otherwise be regarded as a restraint within the doctrine is not subject to the doctrine if the restriction in question is one which has passed into general currency.28 However, the pre-existing freedom test has not been rejected as a viable test.29 [26-05] Contracts to which the principles apply. As the discussion in the previous paragraph indicates, there is debate as to the contracts which are subject to the restraint of trade doctrine. In Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd30 Lord Wilberforce said the doctrine is ‘to be applied to factual situations with a broad and flexible rule of reason’. He refused to accept that any exhaustive test could be stated to define or identify the contracts to which the doctrine applies. In the Esso case it was argued that the doctrine applies only to ‘personal’ restraints and does not apply to a restriction on the use of a particular piece of land. However, as a general proposition, this argument was rejected and the doctrine applied to a mortgage of land.31 Similarly, in Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd32 the High Court rejected an argument that the doctrine does not apply to a lease of land. Nevertheless, it would seem that where a purchaser or lessee of land acquires rights and takes possession for the first time under a sale of land contract or lease which imposes a restriction on, say, the use to which the land can be put, the purchaser or lessee is not able to invoke the doctrine because a new right — to an extent defined by the restraint — is acquired by virtue of the contract or lease.33 There may, as the Privy Council explained in Bridge v Deacons,34 be certain types of contract which, although imposing a ‘measure of interference with the freedom of trade’, are not to be treated as ‘within the field of restraint of trade, provided that the degree of interference does not
[page 579] exceed the accepted standard’. On the other hand, it may be preferable to regard such contracts as within the doctrine, but as expressing only reasonable restraints. In fact, virtually any contract is likely to impose a restraint of some kind. For example, an agreement to sell specific goods implies a restraint, namely, that the seller will not sell them to another person. The doctrine is never applied to contracts where the restraint is merely incidental to the contract.
Reasonableness of a Restraint General [26-06] Onus of proof. In Herbert Morris Ltd v Saxelby35 Lord Atkinson expressed the onus of proof in the following terms:36 If the restraint affords to the person in whose favour it is imposed nothing more than reasonable protection against something which he is entitled to be protected against, then as between the parties concerned the restraint is to be held to be reasonable in reference to their respective interests, but notwithstanding this the restraint may still be held to be injurious to the public and therefore void; the onus of establishing to the satisfaction of the judge who tries the case facts and circumstances which show that the restraint is of the reasonable character abovementioned resting upon the person alleging that it is of that character, and the onus of showing that, notwithstanding that it is of that character, it is nevertheless injurious to the public and therefore void, resting, in like manner, on the party alleging the latter.
This contrast, between reasonableness in the parties’ interests and reasonableness in the public interest, was confirmed by the subsequent authorities.37 Since, in most cases,38 it is the person who obtained the restraint (the covenantee) who seeks to have it enforced, the onus is on the covenantee to prove that the restraint is reasonable as between the parties. But the burden is on the covenantor to show that the restraint is against the public interest. [26-07] Two questions of reasonableness not one. As can be implied from the preceding paragraph, there are two issues of reasonableness, not just one.39 Thus, in theory, the two issues of reasonableness are distinct. It follows that Lord Pearce’s suggestion in Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd,40 that there is ‘one broad question: is it in the interests of the community that this restraint should, as between the parties, be held to be reasonable and enforceable?’ does not accurately
[page 580] express the law. However, in practice they overlap.41 This is hardly surprising. Because public policy is the dominant consideration, and relevant to both,42 the second issue of reasonableness tends to merge with the first.43 So far as the parties’ interest is concerned, Lord Parker said in Herbert Morris Ltd v Saxelby44 that the restraint ‘must afford no more than adequate protection to the party in whose favour it is imposed’. He thought this test valid as regards both covenantor and covenantee. Thus, although in one sense it is contrary to the covenantor’s interests to be subject to any restraint, it may, as Lord Parker explained, ‘be for his advantage to be able so to subject himself in cases where, if he could not do so he would lose other advantages’. He gave as examples the ‘best terms’ on the sale of an existing business, and the possibility of obtaining employment or training under ‘competent employers’. If the court is satisfied that the restraint confers greater protection than can be justified, there is no further issue of reasonableness and it is unnecessary to consider separately the public interest.45 On the other hand, if no more than adequate protection is achieved by the clause, public interest must be further considered, and the restraint found not to be ‘injurious to the public’.46 One feature of the modern cases is to give more prominence to the public interest than was formerly overtly in evidence, and in the Esso case Lord Hodson47 held one of the restrictive covenants in issue to be unreasonable on the basis that it was injurious to the public. Traditionally, there has been a tendency for the courts to assume that a restraint reasonable as between the parties is not injurious to the public. [26-08] Time of inquiry. The relevant time for examining the reasonableness of a restraint is the time of entry into the contract.48 Although the court must construe the contract, in order to reach a conclusion on its scope, duration and so on, reasonableness does not depend on the intention of the parties. The fact that they regarded the restraint as reasonable, although relevant, cannot be conclusive because of the overriding importance of public policy.49 [page 581] In practice, it is difficult for the court to disregard totally events between
formation and enforcement, and such events may sometimes be useful in determining whether the restraint was reasonable.50 But in Shell UK Ltd v Lostock Garage Ltd51 Lord Denning MR went further, suggesting that the court should not enforce the clause where a subsequent event, unforeseen when the contract was entered into, proves the restraint to be unreasonable. The rationale for such an approach is that, since the court is required to uphold public policy, an agreement which operates in a way which is contrary to public policy should not be enforced even if that was not the position when the contract was agreed. However, the other members of the court did not agree, and in Geraghty v Minter52 Gibbs J left the issue open for future consideration.
Relevant Factors [26-09] Protectable interests. At the heart of the justification of a restraint of trade is the idea that a covenantee is entitled to protect certain interests. If there is no protectable interest the covenant will be regarded as unreasonable. For example, a restriction on competition per se is unenforceable.53 It is therefore important to know what interests may legitimately be the subject of protection. The main justification for a restraint is the protection of an interest in property, typically the goodwill54 of a business. This can be seen most clearly in the sale of business cases where the purchaser is entitled to obtain a restraint covenant from the vendor in order to protect the goodwill transferred by the sale.55 Goodwill is relevant in other cases as well, as where an employer obtains a restraint from an employee to prevent solicitation of clients of the business on termination of the employment.56 The concept of proprietary interest is not a narrow one; it includes, for example, confidential information and trade secrets.57 One important feature of the modern law is the extension of protectable interests beyond proprietary rights, so as to include matters such as economies of trade by manufacturers and suppliers of goods.58 Thus, in Queensland Cooperative Milling Association v Pamag Pty Ltd59 a restraint [page 582] clause in a contract between a baker and flour miller, obliging the baker to use
the miller’s products, was justified by reference to the ‘commercial interest’ of the miller in obtaining customers and maximising sales. In the case of professional sportsmen (and sportswomen) the courts are even prepared to allow such matters as the concern of a governing body to ensure that teams competing do so on an equal footing to be a justification for a restraint on members of the teams.60 [26-10] Scope and duration of restraint. It will always be material to consider the scope and duration of the restraint. So far as scope is concerned, the court is looking for a definite connection between the restraint and the covenantee’s business, trade or profession. If the restraint goes beyond the covenantee’s business61 it will almost invariably be unreasonable by reason of its width.62 There are three things to be considered. First, if relevant, there is the geographical area covered by the restraint clause. For example, it may be relevant to consider whether an employer, vendor of a business or partnership, carries on business in the areas covered by a restraint clause in the contract. Second, there are the acts covered by the restraint. It must be asked what the covenantor is restrained from doing, and whether the covenantor must refrain from doing all the acts referred to for the covenantee to be adequately protected. Third, duration must be taken into account. The longer the restraint the less likely it is that the restraint will be held to be reasonable. Of course, area and time are frequently related: the more limited the area the longer the period which will be justifiable, and vice versa.63 Although duration is necessarily relative to the facts of each case, long restraints are generally held to be unreasonable.64 Two further points about duration may be noted. One is that it is sometimes possible to lay down guidelines for parties to particular types of contracts. For example, in Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd65 a restriction on the freedom of the proprietors of a petrol service station, obliging them for a period not exceeding five years to purchase their petroleum supplies from the one supplier, was said, as a general rule, not to be unreasonable.66 The other point is whether the restraint is to operate after the termination of the contract. Generally, a restraint is more likely to be regarded as reasonable where it operates for no longer than the duration of
[page 583] the contract,67 and in the Esso case Lord Pearce said68 that in some cases the question of reasonableness will not arise in respect of a restraint so limited. Of course, frequently the restriction of a restraint to such a period would be of little value, as in the case of the sale of a business,69 and even in employment contracts, where one might expect a restraint on the employee’s activities to be limited to the duration of employment, the court may find a restraint extending beyond that period to be reasonable.70 [26-11] Benefits derived by the parties. Particularly where reasonableness between the parties is in issue, the court will place emphasis on the benefits derived by the parties from the contract. But, if the restraint affords more than adequate protection to the covenantee, it will be immaterial ‘whether the covenantor has received much or little by way of benefits from entering into the transaction’.71 Frequently, there will be a relationship between the restraint and the benefits derived by the covenantor. Perhaps the best illustration is in respect of contracts for the sale of a business.72 The fact that the vendor is prepared to agree to a restraint, and so ensure that the purchaser obtains the full benefit of the goodwill sold, enhances the price of the business and so benefits the vendor.73 Indeed, a vendor who is unwilling to agree to a restraint may find it difficult to sell. In this sense it is in the vendor’s interest to agree to a restraint. The court will be reluctant to hold the restraint unreasonable if that would enable the vendor to obtain (or retain) the purchase price without providing the whole of the consideration bargained for by the purchaser.74 Thus, the benefits to be taken into account are, as Walsh J said in Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd,75 ‘not limited’ to what the covenantor ‘receives in money or other property’. Walsh J went on to explain, in the context of an exclusive dealing contract, that a covenantor may be regarded ‘as obtaining, in return for a restraint, a benefit which consists simply in being able by this means to procure an agreement in aid of his trading’. He gave as an example an agreement for the regular supply of goods which the covenantor would not be able to obtain but for an agreement to sell only those goods supplied by the covenantee. The effect of having regard to benefits obtained under the contract is to make the ‘quantum’,76 and perhaps even the ‘adequacy’,77 of the
[page 584] consideration received by the covenantor relevant to the issue of reasonableness. [26-12] Commercial setting of contract. From what has already been said it is obvious that the issue of reasonableness, whether between the parties or in respect of the public interest, is not considered in the abstract. The commercial setting of the contract is therefore important. For example, in Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd78 there was evidence that of about 36,000 petrol filling stations in Britain some 35,000 were tied to particular petrol companies, such as Esso. Having regard to the general acceptance of such restrictions in the industry the House of Lords was reluctant to reach a decision which would outlaw all these trade ties. Accordingly, a decision was reached which gave judicial acceptance to the practice of the trade, but which indicated that an unreasonably long restraint would be treated as contrary to public policy. Similarly, in Bridge v Deacons79 the Privy Council thought it relevant to the reasonableness of a restraint in a solicitors’ partnership agreement that the agreement had been drawn up by solicitors, and represented the view of persons experienced in the field. In Texaco Ltd v Mulberry Filling Station Ltd80 Ungoed-Thomas J said that the court should not, in considering the reasonableness of a restraint, attempt to promote any general economic theory. That could, he said,81 involve ‘balancing a mass of conflicting economic, social and other interests which a court of law might be ill-adapted to achieve’, notwithstanding that the public interest might in fact be prejudiced (or promoted) by the decision of the court. Legislation such as the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) has been passed to promote economic theories favouring competition and such evidence is relevant to contracts within the Act, some of which would formerly have been governed by the common law.82 In effect parliament has made the point that the common law approach is too narrow. [26-13] Bargaining position of the parties. There are many decisions in which the courts have referred to the relevance of inequality of bargaining power to contracts in restraint of trade.83 Thus, whatever view should be taken about the relevance of inequality of bargaining power and unconscionability to contracts generally,84 when considering whether a restraint is reasonable it may be relevant to examine the relative bargaining positions of the parties to the contract. In A Schroeder Music Publishing Co Ltd v Macaulay85 Lord Diplock said86 that it is:
[page 585] salutary to acknowledge that in refusing to enforce provisions of a contract whereby one party agrees for the benefit of the other party to exploit or to refrain from exploiting his own earning power, the public policy which the court is implementing is not some 19th-century economic theory about the benefit to the general public of freedom of trade, but the protection of those whose bargaining power is weak against being forced by those whose bargaining power is stronger to enter into bargains that are unconscionable … If one looks at the reasoning of 19th-century judges in cases about contracts in restraint of trade one finds lip service paid to current economic theories, but if one looks at what they said in the light of what they did, one finds that they struck down a bargain if they thought it was unconscionable as between the parties to it and upheld it if they thought it was not.
Where inequality of bargaining power is present the court will, as the passage quoted above indicates, hold the restraint to be unreasonable if the party with the stronger position used that position to extract an unconscionable restraint. The fact that the parties bargained on equal terms, or that there is no evidence of abuse of a superior position, while not conclusive,87 is given considerable weight.88 And there are some industries and markets where restraints are so well established and widely practised that acceptance of some restraint is in effect part of the price of entry into the industry or market.89 In such cases, acceptance of the restraint — and entry into the industry or market — may well advance trade.90
Particular Contracts Sale of Business [26-14] Sale of business. In Nordenfelt v Maxim Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Co Ltd91 Nordenfelt had been very successful in the munitions industry and carried on a very substantial business until the business was purchased in 1886 by the Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Co. Nordenfelt was held to be bound by a restraint clause which precluded his involvement in the munitions industry for a period of 25 years. There was no limitation placed on the geographical scope of the clause, although it was subject to provisos exempting explosives, other than gunpowder, and submarines and torpedoes. The 25-year period commenced from the time of incorporation of the defendant company which was formed to amalgamate the Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Co and the Maxim
[page 586] Gun Co. Although the restraint clause was in fact obtained pursuant to the amalgamation agreement, the House of Lords considered that the case had to be treated as if the restraint clause had been agreed in consideration of a direct transfer by Nordenfelt of the goodwill of his business, and taken by the plaintiffs with the object of protecting it from derogation by Nordenfelt. Now, it may seem surprising that a restraint unlimited in scope should have been upheld, but the point was that Nordenfelt had comparatively few customers, but a worldwide trade so that, by reason of the nature of the business, the restraint could be justified. In any event, it was hardly contrary to the public policy of England for an individual to be restrained from doing munitions business in foreign countries. Time and again in the sale of business cases the courts have said that the sale of the goodwill of the business provides a justification for and measure of the enforceability of a restraint.92 But if the restraint is not ancillary to the sale of the goodwill of a business it will be struck down. Thus, in Vancouver Malt and Sake Brewing Co Ltd v Vancouver Breweries Ltd93 an agreement was reached in 1927 for the sale by the Malt and Sake company (the vendor) of the goodwill of their brewers’ licence, except insofar as it related to sake, to the Breweries company (the purchaser). The agreement contained a covenant by the vendor not to engage in the business of manufacturing, brewing, selling or disposing of beer or similar products other than sake. But the vendor had no goodwill relating to beer, as its sole business was the brewing of sake. In fact, the Privy Council was satisfied that there was no sale of anything, just a facade of a sale invented to give respectability to a promise by the vendor not in future to compete with the purchaser. In addition, the covenant was too wide: if interpreted literally it covered the whole world; whereas any goodwill of the vendor was limited to Vancouver where it carried on business, or perhaps to British Columbia. Thus, the restraint clause was contrary to public policy and the purchaser was unsuccessful in seeking to enforce it.
Employment Contracts [26-15] Matters to be considered. Employment contracts are subject to a stricter approach than contracts for the sale of a business. It is quite common for a restraint clause in an employment contract to fail to pass the test of
reasonableness on the ground that it is too wide, or for too long a period. Gibbs J explained in Geraghty v Minter94 that the courts ‘in general take a stricter and less favourable view of covenants in restraint of trade entered into between employer and employee than of similar covenants between vendor and purchaser’. This is because a restraint is likely to have more impact in the employment context, and because there is a greater danger of abuse of a superior bargaining position. The proper approach is as follows.95 [page 587] First, the properly protectable interests of the employer must be identified. The nature and geographical spread of the employer’s operations, the location of clients and the goodwill of the business, are relevant. Second, the status, functions and duties of the particular employee must be determined. The degree of contact between the particular employee and the clients, the level of seniority and responsibility within the structure of the employer’s operations and possession of (or access to) trade secrets and confidential information belonging to the employer are all relevant factors. Third, a decision must be made as to whether, in the light of these matters, the particular restraint imposed goes no further than to safeguard the employer’s protectable interest. [26-16] Illustrations. In Lindner v Murdock’s Garage96 the defendant was employed as a mechanic by the plaintiffs who carried on a business as motor and general engineers in Crystal Brook and Wirrabara, two towns in South Australia about 30 miles apart. There was no fixed term of employment, and either party could terminate the relationship on giving 21 days’ notice. After the defendant had been employed for more than three years at Crystal Brook he left the plaintiffs’ employment and obtained work at a garage located two or three hundred yards from the plaintiffs’ Crystal Brook garage. When the plaintiffs sought an injunction to enforce the restraint clause in the contract, the defendant argued that the clause was unreasonable. Relevantly, the clause provided that the defendant would not, for the term of his employment or within a period of one year from the termination thereof ‘in any way carry on or be engaged concerned or interested … in the business of garage proprietors, motor and general engineers … or in any similar business now and hereafter carried on by the [plaintiffs] within the same area’.
A majority of the High Court held the restraint to be unreasonable because it extended not only to Crystal Brook, where the plaintiff had to some extent come into contact with the plaintiffs’ customers, but also to Wirrabara where the defendant had never been employed. To use Kitto J’s words,97 a restraint which applied ‘indiscriminately’, to all the areas in which the plaintiffs carried on business, went beyond what was ‘reasonably necessary’ to prevent the injury to their business, because of the limited extent of the defendant’s employment.98 Notwithstanding the general reluctance to enforce restraints contained in employment contracts, the courts are sometimes prepared to enforce a restraint, particularly if the only basis for invalidity is an improbable application of the clause. Thus, in Home Counties Dairies Ltd v Skilton99 the [page 588] defendant was employed as a milkman under a contract which contained a covenant not to ‘serve or sell milk or dairy produce to, or solicit orders for milk or dairy produce from any person or company who at any time during the last six months of his employment shall have been a customer’ of the plaintiffs, and served by the defendant in the course of his employment. This restraint was for a period of one year after the termination of the defendant’s employment. The restraint was held to be valid notwithstanding that, literally interpreted, it might have prevented the defendant from working in a grocery shop or restaurant where dairy produce was sold or served to a customer of the plaintiffs. The court emphasised that a period of one year was reasonable, and also that the clause was limited in its operation to customers of the plaintiffs with whom the defendant had dealt in the course of his employment. The court’s interpretation of the restraint clause was reinforced by another restraint clause, which applied during the term of the defendant’s employment and was expressly limited to dairy businesses. So far as the wide application of the restraint relied on by the defendant was concerned: Harman LJ said100 that the clause was as a matter of construction ‘an agreement not to serve an employer as a milk roundsman’; Salmon LJ said101 that the clause did not ‘purport’ to prevent the defendant ‘from selling cheese or butter in a grocery business; nor … from doing anything in any business other than a dairy business’. He rejected102 the argument that it was invalid because ‘it might cover circumstances’ which
were, in fact, ‘so “extravagant”, “fantastical”, “unlikely or improbable” that they must have been entirely outside the contemplation of the parties’; and Cross LJ, agreeing, said103 that the restraint clause had to be construed ‘as applying only to the event’ of the defendant ‘engaging himself in or being employed by someone engaged in the business of a dairyman’, and did not think that the court should pay regard to ‘improbable contingencies’ which were not within the contemplation of the parties.104
Partnership Agreements [26-17] General. In Geraghty v Minter105 a deed of partnership stated the business of the partnership as being ‘that of insurance loss adjusting investigations and allied business activities’. Clause 21 stated that in the event of dissolution of the partnership certain of its members, including the defendants, should ‘not exercise or carry on or be in any manner whatsoever either directly or indirectly concerned or interested … in the [page 589] trade or business of a similar nature’ within a radius of 20 miles for a period of three years. When the defendants breached this clause the plaintiffs sought an injunction to restrain further breaches. The defendants’ argument that the restraint clause was unreasonable was rejected by a majority of the High Court. Gibbs J said106 that it was ‘probably right to regard partnership agreements as sui generis … and to treat some cases where there is in fact a sale of goodwill as different from those in which an employee is taken into partnership’. In the present case the plaintiffs had retained a substantial interest in the goodwill and the restraint clause was intended to protect that interest. The partnership had a comparatively small number of clients, each of whom was likely to be valuable, and dependent to a large extent on personal contact with the partners. The defendants had been admitted as partners, rather than mere employees. The only basis on which the restraint could have been said to be unreasonable was its application to ‘allied business activities’. In fact, no such activities were carried on by the partnership and the majority of the court took the view that the restraint was not intended to extend beyond businesses of the same character as those actually carried on by the partnership.107
[26-18] Solicitors. Some of the recent cases have concerned solicitors’ partnerships and the applicable principles were stated by the Privy Council in Bridge v Deacons.108 The plaintiffs, a Hong Kong firm of solicitors, sought to enforce a restraint clause contained in a partnership agreement to which the defendant was a party. He had been a partner between 1974 and 1982. The relevant clause provided, in part, that a person who ceased to be a partner would not ‘for a period of five years thereafter act as a solicitor, notary, trade mark or patent agent or in any similar capacity’ in Hong Kong for ‘any person, firm or company who was at the time of his ceasing to be a partner or had during the period of three years prior thereto been a client of the partnership’. In rejecting the defendant’s contention that the restraint was unreasonable, the Board considered relevant prior decisions in both sale of business cases and employment contracts. This was because the partnership agreement bore some resemblance to both.109 The evidence established that the defendant had been mainly concerned with a specialised area of the plaintiffs’ business (the intellectual and industrial property department): he had had no connection or dealings with over 90 per cent of the plaintiffs’ clients. If this had been a simple employment contract there would have been a strong case for saying that the restriction on the defendant’s activities after he had left the firm was too wide. However, this was not the position and, while a partner, the defendant was owner of a share in the most valuable asset of the partnership, namely, its goodwill. Once he ceased to be a partner the plaintiffs owned the whole of [page 590] the assets and they were therefore entitled to some protection against appropriation by the defendant of any part of the goodwill. In this respect the position was analogous to a sale of business case. Five specific factors were referred to: (1) the protection did not extend beyond the clients of the plaintiffs’ practice; (2) the restraint applied equally to all partners — the defendant had not been singled out for special treatment and the partners’ interests were not separated in a way which made the restraint unreasonable; (3) the five-year period was not unreasonably long; (4) the quantum of consideration provided for by the partnership agreement,
while perhaps a little on the low side, was not insignificant and could be justified; (5) there was a ‘clear public interest in facilitating the assumption by established solicitors’ firms of younger men as partners’.110 A decision that the restraint was unreasonable might have discouraged the introduction of young solicitors, such as the defendant, to established firms. In reaching this decision the Privy Council expressly disapproved111 a statement by Lord Denning MR in Oswald Hickson Collier & Co v CarterRuck.112 Lord Denning MR had accepted an argument that, because the relationship between solicitor and client is of a fiduciary nature, a restraint clause precluding a solicitor from acting for a client who wanted the solicitor to act is necessarily contrary to public policy. The idea that it is impossible to have a ‘reasonable’ restraint where a fiduciary relationship exists is difficult to accept as a general proposition.113 And in Edwards v Worboys114 the English Court of Appeal said that there is no special rule of law applicable to restraints of trade on the part of persons who occupy a fiduciary position in relation to their clients.
Exclusive Dealing and Exclusive Service Contracts [26-19] Exclusive dealing.115 Where a manufacturer and retailer reach an agreement under which the retailer agrees to take all requirements exclusively from the manufacturer,116 the approach of the courts has generally been to regard the parties as the best judges of what is reasonable between them. Thus, assuming the parties have in fact bargained at arm’s length, the court will be slow to hold the restraint unreasonable. [page 591] For example, in Peters American Delicacy Co Ltd v Patricia’s Chocolates and Candies Pty Ltd117 a contract between a retailer and manufacturers of ice cream provided that the retailer would not for a period of 60 months sell ice cream, other than that manufactured by the manufacturers, from certain premises or at any other place within a radius of five miles. The period of 60 months was fixed
by reference to cl 1 of the agreement which stated an obligation to supply quantities of ice cream ordered by the retailer. In addition, the restraint clause was prefaced by an agreement that its operation was contingent on the manufacturers being able to supply ice cream at prices specified, or agreed from time to time. The High Court, by majority, held that the restraint clause was valid. The parties had bargained on equal terms, the manufacturers were entitled to protect their business reputation and goodwill, the agreement did not operate unfairly against the retailer and there was no evidence that it was injurious to the public. Accordingly, the manufacturers obtained an injunction preventing the sale of ice cream other than that manufactured or supplied by them. The same approach has been taken: to restraints in contracts between traders and trading associations, entered into for the purpose of orderly marketing and price protection;118 to restraints in contracts for the distribution of products, between agents and combinations of producers, aimed at regulating supply and maintaining prices;119 and to exclusive dealing contracts between manufacturers and suppliers of raw materials. For example, in Queensland Co-operative Milling Association v Pamag Pty Ltd120 the plaintiffs, flour millers in Queensland, sought to enforce a restraint clause against the defendants who carried on a bakery business in that State. As part of a loan agreement for $4500, the defendants agreed, for a maximum period of seven years, to purchase ‘all flour wheatmeal or other commodities’ which they might require for their bakery business, so long as the plaintiffs were ‘ready to supply the same at fair and reasonable prices’. In breach of this covenant the defendants purported to grant the right of exclusive supply to another supplier. The High Court held that the restraint was valid, and restrained the defendants from purchasing their flour in breach of the covenant given to the plaintiffs. In justification of this decision it was pointed out that the parties had bargained at arm’s length, and that the covenant was simply part of the price of financial assistance. The covenant was reasonable because the obligation to charge a fair and reasonable price protected the defendants. It also helped to overcome the matter most likely to prejudice them, namely, the supply of inferior grades of flour and other materials. The basic principles governing the restraint of trade doctrine were restated in two important cases in the context of exclusive dealing (‘solus’)
[page 592] arrangements between garage proprietors and petrol companies. Under these arrangements, proprietors of petrol filling stations agree to take their supplies exclusively from one supplier. In the first case, Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd,121 two contracts were in issue. One related to the Corner Garage, and was for a period of 21 years. The other, which related to the Mustow Green Garage, was for a period of four years and five months. Both garages were owned by the defendants, who undertook to purchase their ‘total requirements of motor fuels’ from Esso. The period of the first restraint depended on the repayment of a loan from the plaintiffs, and the period of the second was fixed by reference to the unexpired period of an earlier agreement. The defendants had also promised to grant security to the plaintiffs for a loan of £7000 by giving a mortgage over the Corner Garage. The mortgage was subsequently granted and the mortgage deed also contained an exclusive dealing covenant by the defendants as mortgagors. The plaintiffs had agreed to lend the £7000 and to supply all the defendants’ motor fuel requirements at the plaintiffs’ wholesale schedule price. Subsequently, the defendants found that they could purchase their petrol requirements elsewhere at a lower price and they ceased to sell Esso petrol. Accordingly, the plaintiffs sought injunctions to restrain the defendants from buying petrol other than from the plaintiffs. The House of Lords held that both agreements were in restraint of trade but that the shorter restraint, in respect of the Mustow Green Garage, had been shown to be reasonable. Apart from the loan, the benefits to the defendants consisted mainly in the ability to purchase Esso petrol at the discounted wholesale price; and the main benefits for the plaintiffs were economies in distribution costs and a degree of certainty in purchases. A tie of less than five years did not afford more than adequate protection122 whereas a tie of 21 years went far beyond what was commercially necessary. Leaving aside the loan, the defendants obtained no greater advantage than they would have obtained from agreeing to a five-year tie. The second case is Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd,123 where the High Court followed the Esso case. The facts were complicated but, essentially, were as follows. Rocca owned land in Para Hills, South Australia. On 19 June 1964 an agreement was reached with Amoco under which, with the assistance of Amoco, Rocca was to develop the land and erect a service station. It was also agreed that a lease of the premises would be granted
to Amoco for a period of 15 years, and that Amoco would then grant Rocca an underlease for a term of 15 years less one day. The lease and underlease were executed in May 1966, but commenced on 30 November 1964. The underlease obliged Rocca to purchase stated minimum quantities of petrol and motor oil from Amoco each month. In addition, Rocca covenanted to purchase exclusively from Amoco all the petroleum products required for sale on the premises, and not to buy petroleum products from anyone else, provided that Amoco was [page 593] able to supply such products. The underlease precluded Rocca from ceasing to carry on business without the consent of Amoco. In 1971 Rocca wished to renegotiate the arrangements and, when Amoco refused, began negotiations with another oil company. Subsequently, Rocca began to replace the Amoco equipment with that of another oil company and Amoco then commenced proceedings for an injunction to restrain breaches of the underlease. A majority of the High Court held the 15-year restraint to be too long and unreasonable. Moreover, the terms of the underlease were quite stringent from Rocca’s point of view. In particular, Rocca was bound to purchase the minimum quantities of petrol and oil regardless of the state of trade and the market conditions.124 The restraint covenants in the underlease were therefore held to be unenforceable.125 [26-20] Exclusive service contracts. An exclusive service contract obliges a person to provide his or her services exclusively to the other party to the contract. Many such contracts are not considered to be in restraint of trade. For example, an executive employee’s undertaking to serve only one employer may merely be an incident of the contract, necessary to ensure that the employer gets the full benefit of the employee’s services. But an exclusive service agreement may go too far. Thus, in A Schroeder Music Publishing Co Ltd v Macaulay126 the defendants, music publishers, engaged the exclusive services of the plaintiff for a period of at least five years, and possibly 10, under an agreement which contained provisions capable of operating unfairly against the plaintiff. By virtue of the contract the plaintiff assigned to the defendants the full copyright for the whole world in each and every composition written by the plaintiff either alone or in collaboration with any other person. If royalties were received, 50 per cent was to go to the defendants. A clause in the contract gave the defendants the
right to terminate the agreement on giving one month’s notice. Although the plaintiff could not assign his rights under the contract without the defendants’ consent, the defendants had an unfettered right of assignment. The House of Lords had little difficulty in holding that the contract was in restraint of trade, and that it could not be justified: there was no obligation on the defendants to publish the plaintiff’s works — the plaintiff could not even recover the copyright in a work which the defendants refused to publish; the agreement was unreasonably long in its duration; and the bargain was an unfair one from the plaintiff’s point of view, the defendants having used their superior bargaining position to obtain an unconscionable contract. [page 594]
Impact of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) [26-21] Introduction. The Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) prohibits ‘Restrictive Trade Practices’ (Pt IV) and Pt 3-1 of the Australian Consumer Law prohibits ‘Unfair Practices’. Most of the prohibitions on ‘Restrictive Trade Practices’ are against the various defined forms of conduct ‘in trade or commerce’ by ‘corporations’.127 Wide as the operation of the Act may be, it does not apply as generally as the common law restraint of trade doctrine.128 The prohibitions on ‘Unfair Practices’ are more general, applying to various defined forms of conduct ‘in trade or commerce’ by ‘persons’. Whether a contract is unenforceable by reason of a contravention of a particular provision of the Act may be a difficult question. Defences of illegality based on alleged contraventions of provisions of Pt IV have been entertained in several cases.129 State courts have jurisdiction to entertain such defences: a defence of illegality is not a matter arising under the Act in respect of a civil proceeding instituted under Pt VI of the Act, jurisdiction to hear and determine which is vested by s 86(1) in the Federal Court of Australia.130 State courts have jurisdiction in relation to matters arising under the Australian Consumer Law.131
[26-22] Contrast with common law. There are also differences between the common law doctrine and the substantive aspects of the practices outlawed by Pt IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth). First, s 51 excepts from Pt IV (among other things) three classes of restraint which had dominated the cases on the common law doctrine:132 restraints on employees as to their post-employment work; restraints on partners; and provisions in contracts for the sale of a business or shares in a company carrying on a business, protecting the purchaser in respect of the goodwill of the business. Second, the requirements in s 45, that a contract, arrangement or understanding should contain an exclusionary provision,133 or a provision [page 595] having the purpose or effect of substantially lessening competition, have no counterpart in the common law doctrine. Third, it was explained earlier134 that although a reasonable restraint is unenforceable against a party who has chosen not to observe it, voluntary observance is lawful notwithstanding any conflict with the public interest involved. At common law restraints are unenforceable but not illegal.135 Although the common law doctrine is expressed in terms of both interparty and public interests, once a restraint is held to give no more than reasonable protection as between the parties, independent questions of ‘the public interest’ rarely arise.136 The public interest is not conceived of as entitling the courts to legislate for society’s economic welfare.137 But the scheme of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) is radically different: voluntary observance is prohibited; the public interest in competition is a major concern; a pecuniary penalty may be payable for contravention; any contract may be illegal; and the Act, within its field of operation, provides for enforcement remedies of various kinds by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission and
by private persons, including persons who were not subject to any restraint of trade. [26-23] Contraventions and remedies. It is convenient to consider the provisions of Pt IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) and the prohibitions on ‘Unfair Practices’ in the Australian Consumer Law separately. The position is straightforward in the case of sections in Pt IV which declare particular contractual provisions ‘unenforceable’138 or prohibit the making of ‘contracts’ falling within a particular description.139 But it is more complex where, for example, a particular contract merely happens to constitute, in whole or in part, a ‘practice’ defined otherwise, such as ‘the practice of exclusive dealing’.140 Most of Pt IV’s prohibitions are of this class141 and so are not aimed at the making of contracts as such. Section 76 provides for payment of a pecuniary penalty to the Commonwealth by a person in contravention of a Pt IV prohibition, and also by other persons, such as aiders and abettors and persons who have been in any way, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in, or party to, a contravention. Section 78 provides that criminal proceedings do not lie against those liable to pay the pecuniary penalties. It can reasonably be argued that ss 87(1) and (2)(a) of the Act, which empower the court to [page 596] declare contracts void ab initio, indicate a legislative intention that contracts which constitute contraventions of Pt IV provisions should not, generally, be illegal or void.142 Part 3-1 of the Australian Consumer Law contains many prohibitions on ‘unfair practices’. The conduct prohibited may, in a particular case, be conduct which affects a contract. Examples include: misleading or deceptive conduct amounting to a pre-contract misrepresentation;143 ‘physical force or undue harassment or coercion’ in connection with the supply of land, goods or services to a consumer;144 and unconscionable conduct.145 Contravention of such provisions does not of itself make a contract illegal or
void.146 Nor does contravention render such contracts in restraint of trade. However, the provisions do provide a broader basis for relief in respect of contracts which may contain covenants which, although in restraint of trade, satisfy the test of reasonableness. 1.
[1966] Ch 146 at 180.
2.
[1968] AC 269 at 307, 317.
3.
[1968] AC 269 at 331.
4.
See [26-04], [26-05].
5.
That word is most accurately applied to a restraint contained in a deed, but the courts speak generally in terms of ‘covenants’ in restraint of trade rather than ‘clauses’, ‘terms’ or ‘promises’ in restraint of trade.
6.
See Wyatt v Kreglinger [1933] 1 KB 793; Howard F Hudson Pty Ltd v Ronayne (1972) 126 CLR 449. Cf Marshall v NM Financial Management Ltd [1997] 1 WLR 1527 at 1533.
7.
(1971) 125 CLR 353. See also Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain v Dickson [1970] AC 403 (pharmacist); Barnard v Australian Soccer Federation (1988) 81 ALR 51 (professional soccer player); Adamson v New South Wales Rugby League Ltd (1991) 103 ALR 319, see Kim Baumeler and Lynden Griggs (1993) 6 JCL 275; Andrew Humphreys (1993) 15 Syd LR 92 (professional footballer).
8.
(1971) 125 CLR 353 at 372.
9.
[1894] AC 535 at 565.
10.
See, eg Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 295, 299, 307, 318; Buckley v Tutty (1971) 125 CLR 353 at 376; Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 306–7, 315; 1 ALR 385.
11.
[1894] AC 535 at 565.
12.
See, eg Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 295, 307, 318– 19; Buckley v Tutty (1971) 125 CLR 353 at 376; Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 306–7, 315.
13.
See generally on severance [27-29]–[27-39].
14.
See Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 297.
15.
See further [26-15].
16.
See, eg Mason v Provident Clothing and Supply Co Ltd [1913] AC 724 at 738, 739, 746. See also Buckley v Tutty (1971) 125 CLR 353 at 381; Hughes v Western Australian Cricket Association (Inc) (1986) 69 ALR 660 at 703–4. But the suggestion (see Nagle v Feilden [1966] 2 QB 633) that a person’s ‘right to work’ is an independent basis for decision has been rejected. See, eg Curro v Beyond Productions Pty Ltd (1993) 30 NSWLR 337 at 346.
17.
Subject to the rules on severance discussed [27-29]–[27-39].
18.
[1968] 2 NSWR 286.
19.
But see now the Restraints of Trade Act 1976 (NSW) (see [27-38]–[27-39]).
20.
[1968] AC 269 at 331.
21.
The issue dealt with in [26-05] is closely related to this issue.
22.
[1968] AC 269 at 298; cf at 309.
23.
[1968] AC 269 at 325; cf at 316–17. See also Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 313; Quadramain Pty Ltd v Sevastapol Investments Pty Ltd (1976) 133 CLR 390; 8 ALR 555; J D Heydon, ‘Restraint of Trade in the High Court’ (1976) 50 ALJ 290.
24.
Howard F Hudson Pty Ltd v Ronayne (1972) 126 CLR 449 at 467 per Gibbs J. See also Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain v Dickson [1970] AC 403 at 440; Stenhouse Australia Ltd v Phillips [1974] AC 391 at 402.
25.
[1968] AC 269 at 294; cf at 307. See also Curro v Beyond Productions Pty Ltd (1993) 30 NSWLR 337 at 341–2.
26.
[1974] 1 WLR 1308; [1974] 3 All ER 616 (see [26-20]). See also Watson v Prager [1991] 1 WLR 726, especially at 742–7.
27.
Note, however, the rejection in Peters (WA) Ltd v Petersville Ltd (2001) 205 CLR 126 at 141; 181 ALR 337 of the ‘sterilisation of capacity’ test suggested by Lord Pearce in Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 328.
28.
See Australian Capital Territory v Munday (2000) 173 ALR 1 at 21 (applying Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 331–4).
29.
Although in Maggbury Pty Ltd v Hafele Australia Pty Ltd (2001) 210 CLR 181 at 203 (but cf 216); 185 ALR 152 it was said that the High Court rejected the preexisting freedom test in Peters (WA) Ltd v Petersville Ltd (2001) 205 CLR 126, that does not seem correct.
30.
[1968] AC 269 at 331, 332; see also at 306. See also Maggbury Pty Ltd v Hafele Australia Pty Ltd (2001) 210 CLR 181 at 208.
31.
Cf Queensland Co-operative Milling Association v Pamag Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 260; 1 ALR 47 (bill of sale).
32.
(1973) 133 CLR 288. Compare Cleveland Petroleum Co Ltd v Dartstone Ltd [1969] 1 WLR 116; and contrast Alec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil (Great Britain) Ltd [1985] 1 WLR 173.
33.
See Cleveland Petroleum Co Ltd v Dartstone Ltd [1969] 1 WLR 116; Quadramain Pty Ltd v Sevastapol Investments Pty Ltd (1976) 133 CLR 390.
34.
[1984] AC 705 at 713.
35.
[1916] 1 AC 688.
36.
[1916] 1 AC 688 at 700. See also at 707, 708.
37.
See, eg Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 319; Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 315–16.
38.
But not all; see Wyatt v Kreglinger [1933] 1 KB 793.
39.
See, eg Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 299, 307, 319; Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 307–8.
40.
[1968] AC 269 at 324.
41.
See Herbert Morris Ltd v Saxelby [1916] 1 AC 688 at 699; Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 307–8.
42.
Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 301, 321.
43.
Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 307–8.
44.
[1916] 1 AC 688 at 707. See also Lindner v Murdock’s Garage (1950) 83 CLR 628 at 645, 654; Bridge v Deacons [1984] AC 705 at 713.
45.
See Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at
306. 46.
Herbert Morris Ltd v Saxelby [1916] 1 AC 688 at 707. See also Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 307–8.
47.
[1968] AC 269 at 321.
48.
See, eg Lindner v Murdock’s Garage (1950) 83 CLR 628 at 653; Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 318; Bridge v Deacons [1984] AC 705 at 718–19; Jardin v Metcash Ltd (2011) 285 ALR 677 at 694; [2011] NSWCA 409 at [88].
49.
See Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 308. But see [26-19].
50.
See Adamson v New South Wales Rugby League Ltd (1991) 103 ALR 319 at 360.
51.
[1977] 1 All ER 481 at 488–9.
52.
(1979) 142 CLR 177 at 188; 26 ALR 141. But cf (1979) 142 CLR 177 at 199–200.
53.
See, eg Vancouver Malt and Sake Brewing Co Ltd v Vancouver Breweries Ltd [1934] AC 181 (see [26-14]). But the description is not in itself particularly helpful: Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 301.
54.
For the meaning of ‘goodwill’ see Bacchus Marsh Concentrated Milk Co Ltd v Joseph Nathan & Co Ltd (1919) 26 CLR 410 at 438; FCT v Murry (1998) 193 CLR 605; 155 ALR 67.
55.
See [26-14].
56.
See, eg Fitch v Dewes [1921] 2 AC 158; Marion White Ltd v Francis [1972] 3 All ER 857, and generally [26-15]–[26-16]. See also Peters American Delicacy Co Ltd v Patricia’s Chocolates and Candies Pty Ltd (1947) 77 CLR 574 (see [26-19]).
57.
See Bacchus Marsh Concentrated Milk Co Ltd v Joseph Nathan & Co Ltd (1919) 26 CLR 410 at 441; K A & C Smith Pty Ltd v Ward (1998) 45 NSWLR 702 at 723.
58.
See, eg Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 (see [26-19]).
59.
(1973) 133 CLR 260.
60.
See Buckley v Tutty (1971) 125 CLR 353. See K E Lindgren, ‘Sport and the Law: The Players Contract’ (1991) 4 JCL 135.
61.
See, eg [26-14].
62.
Subject to issues of severance dealt with [27-29]–[27-39].
63.
See, eg Fitch v Dewes [1921] 2 AC 158 at 162–3.
64.
For an extreme illustration of enforcement see Fitch v Dewes [1921] 2 AC 158 (lifetime restraint on solicitor).
65.
[1968] AC 269 (see [26-19]).
66.
For enforcement of a longer restraint see Alec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil (Great Britain) Ltd [1985] 1 WLR 173.
67.
See, eg Buckenara v Hawthorn Football Club Ltd [1988] VR 39.
68.
[1968] AC 269 at 328.
69.
See generally [26-14].
70.
See generally [26-15]–[26-16].
71.
Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 306.
72.
See generally [26-14].
73.
See, eg Bridge v Deacons [1984] AC 705 at 713.
74.
See Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 335–6.
75.
(1973) 133 CLR 288 at 306.
76.
See, eg Nordenfelt v Maxim Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Co Ltd [1894] AC 535 at 565; Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 300, 323 (cf at 318); Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 305–6, 316.
77.
See Bridge v Deacons [1984] AC 705 at 718; Alec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil (Great Britain) Ltd [1985] 1 WLR 173 at 185.
78.
[1968] AC 269 (see [26-19]).
79.
[1984] AC 705 at 717.
80.
[1972] 1 WLR 814.
81.
[1972] 1 WLR 814 at 827.
82.
See generally [26-22].
83.
See, eg Queensland Co-operative Milling Association v Pamag Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 260 at 268; Curro v Beyond Productions Pty Ltd (1993) 30 NSWLR 337 at 345. And cf Potato Producers Cooperative Ltd v Pavone [1962] VR 231.
84.
See generally Chapter 24.
85.
[1974] 1 WLR 1308.
86.
[1974] 1 WLR 1308 at 1315. For a criticism, principally from an economic theory perspective, see M J Trebilcock, ‘The Doctrine of Inequality of Bargaining Power: Post-Benthamite Economics in the House of Lords’ (1976) 26 Univ of Toronto LJ 359. See also B A Leon, B J Reiter and C L Waldrum, ‘Fairness Issues in Employment Contracts’ (1993) 6 JCL 189.
87.
See Queensland Co-operative Milling Association v Pamag Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 260 at 268; Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 288 at 306–7, 316–17.
88.
See further [26-19].
89.
See, eg Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269.
90.
See Bacchus Marsh Concentrated Milk Co Ltd v Joseph Nathan & Co Ltd (1919) 26 CLR 410 at 441.
91.
[1894] AC 535.
92.
See, eg Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 335–6.
93.
[1934] AC 181.
94.
(1979) 142 CLR 177 at 185. See also Mason v Provident Clothing and Supply Co Ltd [1913] AC 724 at 738.
95.
See generally Brightman v Lamson Paragon Ltd (1914) 18 CLR 331; Fitch v Dewes [1921] 2 AC 158; Lindner v Murdock’s Garage (1950) 83 CLR 628; A Buckle & Son Pty Ltd v McAllister (1986) 4 NSWLR 426.
96.
(1950) 83 CLR 628. See also Jardin v Metcash Ltd (2011) 285 ALR 677 at 696; [2011] NSWCA 409 at [97].
97.
(1950) 83 CLR 628 at 656.
98.
For further illustrations see Herbert Morris Ltd v Saxelby [1916] 1 AC 688; Ashcoast Pty Ltd v Whillans (1998) [2000] 2 Qd R 1 at 4, 5. Cf Heine Bros (Aust) Pty Ltd v Forrest [1963] VR 383.
99.
[1970] 1 WLR 526.
100. [1970] 1 WLR 526 at 533. 101. [1970] 1 WLR 526 at 535. 102. [1970] 1 WLR 526 at 536. 103. [1970] 1 WLR 526 at 537. 104. See also Marion White Ltd v Francis [1972] 3 All ER 857. Query whether this approach was taken too far in Littlewoods Organisation Ltd v Harris [1978] 1 All ER 1026 (see Talk of the Town Pty Ltd v Hagstrom (1990) 99 ALR 130 at 134). 105. (1979) 142 CLR 177. 106. (1979) 142 CLR 177 at 185. 107. Cf Lu v Lim (1993) 30 NSWLR 332 at 335. 108. [1984] AC 705. 109. Cf BB Australia Pty Ltd v Karioi Pty Ltd (2010) 278 ALR 105 at 120; [2010] NSWCA 347 at [61] (franchise contracts commonly have characteristics relevant to both employment and vendor categories). 110. [1984] AC 705 at 718. 111. [1984] AC 705 at 719. 112. (1982) [1984] AC 720n at 723. 113. See Sharah v Healey [1982] 2 NSWLR 223 at 227. 114. (1982) [1984] AC 724n at 726, 728. See also Kerr v Morris [1987] Ch 90 (National Health Service doctor); Watson v Prager [1991] 1 WLR 726 (manager of boxer occupied fiduciary position). 115. Some agreements of the type considered in this paragraph may be contrary to Pt IV of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth). See [26-21]–[26-23]. 116. See [3-23]. 117. (1947) 77 CLR 574. 118. See, eg English Hop Growers Ltd v Dering [1928] 2 KB 174, especially at 180, 192. 119. See, eg North Western Salt Co Ltd v Electrolytic Alkali Co Ltd [1914] AC 461, especially at 471. 120. (1973) 133 CLR 260. 121. [1968] AC 269. 122. But there was no undertaking by the plaintiffs to supply at a reasonable price and they retained a discretion to withhold supplies if, for example, there was insufficient petrol to supply all their outlets. 123. (1973) 133 CLR 288. 124. Cf Shell UK Ltd v Lostock Garage Ltd [1977] 1 All ER 481. 125. See further [27-33]. 126. [1974] 1 WLR 1308. 127. Defined in s 4(1). The Act is also given an operation against non-corporate entities, such as natural persons, when any one of several other specified constitutional bases of legislative power is present: s 6. 128. For the impact of the Restraints of Trade Act 1976 (NSW) see [27-38]–[27-39].
129. Hollywood Premiere Sales Pty Ltd v Faberge Australia (Pty) Ltd (1976) 11 ALR 18; W R Carpenter Finance Corp Ltd v Moloney (1979) 6 TPC 17; Westco Motors (Distributors) Pty Ltd v Palmer [1979] 2 NSWLR 93; Bestoys Pty Ltd v George Wills & Co Ltd (1981) 36 ALR 366. 130. See Bestoys Pty Ltd v George Wills & Co Ltd (1981) 36 ALR 366; Stack v Coast Securities (No 9) Pty Ltd (1983) 154 CLR 261; 49 ALR 193; Carlton and United Breweries Ltd v Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd (1986) 161 CLR 543; 66 ALR 347. 131. See also Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), s 86(2). Note also s 86A, providing for the transfer of certain matters to State or Territory courts. 132. See also s 4M (preservation of common law restraint of trade). On the relationship between the common law and the Act see generally Peters (WA) Ltd v Petersville Ltd (2001) 205 CLR 126. 133. Defined in s 4D. 134. See [26-03]. 135. See [26-03]. 136. Cf [26-07]. 137. And the onus of establishing that a restraint is contrary to the public interest rests on the party asserting this. See [26-06]. 138. See ss 45(1), 45B(1). 139. See, eg ss 45(2), 45E(2). 140. Section 47. 141. See, eg ss 46, 47, 48, 50. 142. See Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Baxter Healthcare Pty Ltd (2007) 232 CLR 1 at 29, 37; 237 ALR 512 at 527–8, 534; [2007] HCA 38 at [46], [70]; Master Education Services Pty Ltd v Ketchell (2008) 236 CLR 101; 249 ALR 44; [2008] HCA 38. 143. See Chapter 19. 144. See Australian Consumer Law, s 50. 145. See [24-15]–[24-19]. 146. S H Lock (Australia) Ltd v Kennedy (1988) 12 NSWLR 482 at 494; Bank of America Australia Ltd v Ceda Jon International Pty Ltd (1988) 17 NSWLR 290.
[page 597]
Chapter 27
The Effects of Illegality [27-01] Effect on what? It might well be argued that the effects of illegality have already been dealt with, because we have already considered the ways in which statutes and rules of public policy affect contracts. On more than one occasion, for example, it was said that a particular contract was ‘void’ on the ground that public policy had been contravened.1 Thus, to the extent that the effects of illegality include the status of an agreement as an illegal or void contract, ‘effects’ on the contract have been dealt with.2 There is, however, a second dimension to the problem of the effects of illegality, namely, its effect on causes of action, rights and remedies. In essence, the primary question is: ‘To what extent (and in respect of what) is one party to an illegal contract entitled to sue the other?’ A third issue to be dealt with is the effect of illegality on contract performance, that is, the impact of illegality in relation to the consequences which would otherwise flow from performance of the contract. The fact that performance of the contract has taken place may be indicative of the existence of, say, property rights in the subject matter of the contract which are enforceable independently of the contract. For example, delivery of goods under an illegal sale of goods contract may be effective to transfer title in the goods to the buyer. In dealing with the effects of illegality it may be necessary to draw on all three aspects of the problem. Consider, then, the following statement by Devlin LJ in Archbolds (Freightage) Ltd v S Spanglett Ltd:3 The effect of illegality upon a contract may be threefold. If at the time of making the contract there is an intent to perform it in an unlawful way, the contract, although it remains alive, is unenforceable at the suit of the party having that intent; if the intent is held in common, it is not enforceable at all. Another effect of illegality is to prevent a plaintiff from recovering under a contract if in order to prove his rights under it he has to rely upon his own illegal act; he may not do that even though he can show that at the time of making the contract he had no intent to break the law and that at the time of performance he did not know that what he was doing was illegal. The third effect of illegality is to avoid the contract ab initio and that arises if the making of the contract is expressly or impliedly prohibited by statute or is otherwise contrary to public policy.
In Devlin LJ’s analysis the first two issues described above are, to some extent, bound together; but his statement clearly indicates that the effects [page 598] of illegality do not depend solely on an ability to label the contract as ‘illegal’. If the contract is void and/or illegal this will preclude any action on the contract. However, we must also take into account the intention of the plaintiff and the means by which the plaintiff establishes a cause of action. Devlin LJ’s statement is important in another respect. It is an acknowledgment that the effects of illegality where the contract is expressly or impliedly prohibited by statute may differ from those which attach in other cases. This contrast reflects a distinction which has, unfortunately, been blurred in recent cases. The contrast is between, on the one hand, cases where (whether or not the contract is illegal), public policy may operate to deny a plaintiff ’s entitlement to bring a contractual claim and, on the other hand, cases where the contract is expressly or impliedly prohibited.4 In other words, we must distinguish cases where illegality is present, for example, because the plaintiff has committed a statutory offence public policy may require the court to refuse to assist the plaintiff, from cases where, because the contract is prohibited no contractual claim arise. The significance of the contract being prohibited (particularly by statute) is shown by the traditional refusal of the courts to enforce noncontractual claims as well, subject only to certain narrow exceptions.
General Points [27-02] Terminology. There is no shortage of confusing terminology in the area of illegality. Descriptions such as ‘void’, ‘void and illegal’, ‘unenforceable’ and so on pervade the cases. There is frequently disagreement as to whether a rule of public policy should be seen as rendering a contract ‘void’, ‘void and illegal’ or merely ‘unenforceable’. For example, a contract in restraint of trade was said by Lord Denning MR in Shell UK Ltd v Lostock Garage Ltd5 to be merely unenforceable, whereas the Australian cases6 usually express the view that the contract is ‘void’. The High Court found a similar type of disagreement in the context of
contracts prejudicial to the administration of justice in A v Hayden.7 This prompted Mason J to say:8 The true position, as I see it, is that some contracts are void whereas others are valid, though the court will decline to enforce the particular provision in a valid contract in particular circumstances where enforcement of that provision would have an adverse effect on the administration of justice. Thus, a simple agreement not to disclose the existence of a serious criminal offence, which has been, or is about to be, committed in consideration of the payment of a sum of money may well be void because it is illegal. However, it
[page 599] will be otherwise with a contract which is in all respects lawful but nevertheless contains a provision which, if enforced according to its terms, will result in an interference with the administration of justice. Take a contract which contains a minor or subsidiary provision which, though not directed to non-disclosure of criminal offences, imposes an obligation of confidentiality in sweeping terms. If those terms are not susceptible of being read down, the court will refuse to lend its aid to the enforcement of the provision if enforcement would result in the non-disclosure of a criminal offence adversely affecting the administration of justice. In such a case the contract is not void; nor is it unenforceable in the sense in which that term is customarily used in the law of contracts. The case is one in which the court refuses a remedy on the ground of public policy.
He referred to Beresford v Royal Insurance Co Ltd9 as an example of a case in which the court refused a remedy on the ground of public policy (although the contract was not void) because a term of it was contrary to public policy. In that case a term in an insurance contract created an obligation to pay money on the death of the insured, except by suicide occurring within one year from the commencement of the assurance. The insured committed suicide outside the one-year period but the House of Lords refused to enforce the policy, even though on its proper construction it imposed an obligation to pay, because enforcement of the term would have been contrary to public policy.10 The fact that a particular (specific) description has been chosen gives the impression that the description has a predictive value. In fact, the precise meaning of a word such as ‘void’ depends, as always, on the context. As Windeyer J said in his dissenting judgment in Brooks v Burns Philp Trustee Co Ltd:11 The words used do not matter if the actual legal result they are used to express be not in doubt or debate. But it has always seemed to me likely to lead to error, in matters such as this, to adopt first one of the familiar legal adjectives — ‘illegal’, ‘void’, ‘unenforceable’, ‘ineffectual’, ‘nugatory’ — and then having given an act a label to deduce from that its results in law. That is to invert the order of inquiry, and by so doing to beg the question, and allow linguistics to determine legal rights.
The approach which Windeyer J criticises has undoubtedly been used in many
of the cases, and may explain some of the inconsistencies and difficulties in the law. For example, the cases give conflicting guidance on whether an illegal contract is effective to transfer proprietary rights and this is, perhaps, due to indiscriminate use of words such as ‘void’ to describe the contract.12 However, the recent cases13 emphasise that, in the final analysis, it is whether the court will assist the plaintiff that matters, not whether the description of the contract, as void, unenforceable or illegal, is accurate. [page 600] [27-03] Policy considerations. Policy considerations have an important role to play even after it has been decided that the contract is illegal. For example, if A has transferred land to B pursuant to a contract prohibited by statute, whether B should be entitled to keep the land without paying for it is an issue of policy. As such it should not be determined simply by saying that the contract was illegal but nevertheless effective to pass title.14 Whether public policy is better served by allowing A to recover the land, or by allowing B to retain it without paying for it, remains an important question.15 It might be objected that placing emphasis on policy considerations when deciding whether rights should be enforced places the courts in the position of meting out penalties for illegal acts. The fact that the plaintiff has already incurred a criminal penalty, by, for example, contravening a statute, may influence the decision on whether to grant the civil relief claimed. A refusal by the court to assist the plaintiff may be a greater penalty than that imposed by the statute. This may influence the court, in cases where the illegality is not of a particularly heinous nature, to reach a decision in the plaintiff ’s favour on the basis that the statutory penalty is sufficient. This is a valid approach.16 However, it should not be taken so far that it encourages the commission of illegal acts. Thus, it would frequently be wrong for the court to endeavour to restore the parties to the positions they occupied prior to entry into the contract,17 because this might encourage illegality, or involve further illegal acts. Because it is impossible for a court to enforce a contract which is prohibited by statute, one way to bring policy to bear on the effects of illegality is to have regard to the likely consequences of illegality when deciding whether the contract is prohibited by statute or is contrary to public policy.18 For example, in Vita Food Products Inc v Unus Shipping Co Ltd19 in the context of statutory
illegality, Lord Wright, in delivering the advice of the Privy Council, said that ‘public policy understood in a wider sense may at times be better served by refusing to nullify a bargain save on serious and sufficient grounds’. Therefore, given the severe consequences of prohibition,20 it may be more consonant with public policy to hold that the contract is not prohibited.21 [page 601] [27-04] Relevant considerations. A number of considerations are relevant to the effects of illegality, or may be relevant depending on the circumstances of the case. First, what is the source of the illegality? As has been explained, the contract may have been prohibited by statute,22 or have infringed a rule of public policy.23 Second, if a public policy rule has been infringed, does the rule make the contract illegal, as in a case where the contract is to stifle a prosecution,24 or is there merely an element of unenforceability or ‘voidness’, as in the case of a covenant in restraint of trade?25 Third, did the plaintiff (or defendant) in the action know of the illegality? The court is less likely to assist a party who has such knowledge than a party who is ‘innocent’ in the matter.26 Their relative positions may be important. Are the parties equally implicated in the illegality or is one more guilty than the other? Generally speaking, the court will not assist either party where they are equally in the wrong (in pari delicto) but a party who is not equally implicated is more likely to be successful when attempting to enforce a right or remedy.27 Fourth, has the illegal purpose of the contract been carried into effect? Again a court is more likely to assist a plaintiff (or defendant) where the illegality has not been carried out.28 This may involve a consideration of whether the plaintiff (or defendant) repented, and sought to avoid the contract, before or after any illegal purpose was carried out.29 Fifth, and perhaps most importantly, is the plaintiff (or defendant) seeking to enforce the contract or relying on some independent cause of action? It is rare for a party to be able to enforce the contract, but sometimes possible for an independent cause of action (for example, in tort) to be successful.30 Sixth, is the illegal portion of the contract severable from the remainder? If severance is possible the illegal part of the contract can be ignored.31
Finally, there is the overriding consideration of public policy itself.32
Actions Dependent on Illegality for Success [27-05] The ex turpi maxim. The basic maxim of the common law is ex turpi causa non oritur actio, that is, no cause of action arises out of illegality. Lord Mansfield said in Holman v Johnson:33 [page 602] The principle of public policy is this; ex dolo malo non oritur actio. No court will lend its aid to a man who founds his cause of action upon an immoral or an illegal act. If, from the plaintiff ’s own stating or otherwise, the cause of action appears to arise ex turpi causa, or the transgression of a positive law of this country, there the court says he has no right to be assisted. It is upon that ground the court goes; not for the sake of the defendant, but because they will not lend their aid to such a plaintiff.
Strictly speaking, this maxim is, at least in Australia, limited to causes of action which depend for their enforcement on an illegal contract.34 However, the maxim can be seen as stating one aspect of a broader principle of public policy35 under which the plaintiff, as the person invoking the aid of the court, may be refused relief if reliance is placed on an illegal act to establish the cause of action. This is true even if the defendant has not specifically pleaded illegality.36 As explained by Lord Mansfield, the maxim is not applied for the benefit of the defendant. Rather, it is applied to protect the public by refusing to allow the machinery of the courts to be used to assist the commission (or furtherance) of illegal acts, which might be achieved by the enforcement of rights arising from illegal acts.37 Assuming that the contract is not illegal, or contrary to public policy, the fact that the plaintiff has committed an unlawful act is not conclusive. The court must inquire whether the public interest dictates a conclusion adverse to the plaintiff. The nature of the unlawful act, the degree of knowledge and the likelihood that enforcement of the contract would encourage the repetition of the act are factors to be considered.38 To this extent, the application of the ex turpi maxim does not depend on whether the illegality in question rendered the contract void.39 Thus, a plaintiff who has committed some illegal act when performing the contract may find that relief is refused even though the contract is not void. In such a case, because the
contract is not illegal it may be enforceable by the other party. Care must, however, be taken not to extend public policy too far. For example, in Hardy v Motor Insurers’ Bureau40 the English Court of Appeal allowed the plaintiff to recover compensation from the defendants in respect of serious personal injuries suffered when he was injured by a van bearing a stolen road fund licence. Although s 203(3)(a) of the Road Traffic Act 1960 (UK) required a policy of insurance covering liability in respect of the death or bodily injury to any person caused by or arising out of the use [page 603] of a vehicle on the road to be taken out by the driver of a vehicle, the driver of the van was not insured. An agreement between the Minister of Transport and the Motor Insurers’ Bureau provided for the payment to an injured person in respect of the liability of an uninsured driver. The plaintiff relied on this agreement as the basis for his claim.41 The court held that although the ex turpi maxim would have applied to prevent the driver recovering an indemnity if he had paid damages to the plaintiff, the fact that the driver was guilty of criminal offences was not a bar to the claim by the plaintiff against the defendants because he himself committed no antisocial act, and because it was not contrary to public policy for his claim to be enforced. [27-06] No action for damages or debt. A plaintiff is not entitled to recover contract damages or a contract debt if the cause of action depends on an illegal contract. For example, an employee cannot recover wages earned in performing an illegal employment contract.42 Similarly, a creditor will fail to recover money lent if the money was lent pursuant to an illegal contract.43 The mere fact that the plaintiff is able to frame the claim on some other basis, such as in tort,44 makes no difference if the plaintiff is forced to rely on the illegal contract in order to make out the claim. For example, in Nicholls v Stanton45 an action for damages for deceit in respect of a fraudulent misrepresentation made by the defendant which induced the plaintiff to purchase a motor car was unsuccessful because the contract itself was illegal by statute. The court held that in order to prove that damage had been suffered, that is, in order to establish his cause of action, the plaintiff had to prove and rely on the contract. Again, in Thomas Brown & Sons Ltd v Fazal Deen46 an action was brought to recover damages for the defendants’ failure to
return a quantity of gold which the plaintiff had deposited with the defendants. This bailment contract contravened the National Security (Exchange Control) Regulations (Cth) and was held to be illegal. As it was necessary for the plaintiff to rely on the bailment contract in order to recover damages, the High Court held that the action could not be maintained. However, the ex turpi maxim will not apply if the contract is not illegal and there is no reliance on any illegal act. Thus, in Fitzgerald v F J Leonhardt Pty Ltd47 the plaintiff in no way relied on illegality to establish a cause of action in contract for a debt arising from the performance of a drilling contract in the course of which the defendant committed a statutory offence. [page 604] [27-07] No recovery of money paid or property transferred. The ex turpi rule has also been applied to actions for restitution, to recover money paid or property transferred, at least where the claim depends, as a matter of substance, on proof of an illegality. Thus, in Kearley v Thomson48 the plaintiff paid £40 to the defendants, a firm of solicitors, who undertook not to appear at the public examination of a bankrupt. The court held that the contract was illegal as it had a tendency to pervert the course of justice. The defendants, although not obliged to appear, were subject to a duty not to contract out of the opportunity of appearing. The plaintiff failed in his action to recover the money because, in order to enforce his claim, he relied on the illegality. The court expressed49 the ‘general rule’ as being that the ‘plaintiff cannot get at the money which he seeks to recover’ when forced to prove the illegal contract. The rule also applies, indeed the position is even stronger, where the contract is prohibited by statute.50 So far as the recovery of property is concerned, M’Cahill v Henty51 provides an illustration of a case where the court clearly proceeded on the view that no order for reconveyance of land will be made when the transferee received title pursuant to an illegal contract. In that case the agreement was illegal under the Land Act 1865 (Vic). [27-08] Other remedies. The equitable remedies of specific performance52 and injunction53 are not available where a contract is illegal. It is, for example, impossible for a court to order the specific performance of a contract for the sale of land prohibited by statute and the court would deny any jurisdiction to do so.54 We have also seen,55 when examining the restraint of trade cases, that no
relief by way of injunction will be given to enforce a restraint clause which is contrary to public policy and void or unenforceable on that ground. Other equitable remedies, such as rectification56 or an account of profits,57 will also be refused in most cases. [27-09] Generally no estoppel. As can be implied from the above, there is generally no estoppel58 operating to prevent a defendant setting up illegality as a defence to an action framed in reliance on illegality. In Holman v Johnson59 Lord Mansfield said:60 The objection, that a contract is immoral or illegal as between plaintiff and defendant, sounds at all times very ill in the mouth of the defendant. It is not
[page 605] for his sake, however, that the objection is ever allowed; but it is founded in general principles of policy, which the defendant has the advantage of, contrary to the real justice, as between him and the plaintiff, by accident, if I may so say.
For example, the seller in Re Mahmoud and Ispahani61 could not, in an action for damages for breach of contract,62 rely on the buyer’s representation that he possessed the necessary licence as creating an estoppel precluding reliance by the buyer on statutory illegality. In some cases, however, there may be scope for estoppel. For example, in Psaltis v Schultz63 Dixon J acknowledged that the rule of public policy against contracts prejudicial to the status of marriage64 did not preclude an action for breach of promise if, at the time when the promise was made, the promisee was ignorant of the fact that the promisor was married. One possible explanation of the availability of the action is that the promisor is estopped from setting up illegality as a defence to the action. But the inquiry can be relevant only where there is scope for considering whether the plaintiff was ‘at fault’.
Relevance of Fault [27-10] Introduction. It is sometimes relevant to consider whether either (or both) of the parties to the contract knew of the illegality or possessed a sinister intent when entering into the contract. It is clear, however, that the mere fact of ‘innocence’ does not necessarily entitle a party to enforce the contract, and a party will not be so entitled where the making of the contract is prohibited in the
public interest.65 If the parties are equally at fault the plaintiff will fail as the court will consider that the condition of the defendant is better. This is the meaning of the maxim in pari delicto potior est conditio defendentis. As Lord Mansfield explained in Holman v Johnson:66 So if the plaintiff and defendant were to change sides, and the defendant was to bring his action against the plaintiff, the latter would then have the advantage of [the ex turpi maxim]; for where both are equally in fault, potior est conditio defendentis.
The traditional approach to the maxim has been to look for circumstances which displace the maxim because they fall within a specific exception to the rule. However, in the recent cases this approach has been questioned, on the basis that relief may be available under the modern law even though the case does not fall within any such category. Thus, in the context of illegality resulting from a failure to comply with statute, McHugh J suggested in Nelson v Nelson67 that: [page 606] courts should not refuse to enforce legal or equitable rights simply because they arose out of or were associated with an unlawful purpose unless: (a) the statute discloses an intention that those rights should be unenforceable in all circumstances; or (b)(i) the sanction of refusing to enforce those rights is not disproportionate to the seriousness of the unlawful conduct; (ii) the imposition of the sanction is necessary, having regard to the terms of the statute, to protect its objects or policies; and (iii) the statute does not disclose an intention that the sanctions and remedies contained in the statute are to be the only legal consequences of a breach of the statute or the frustration of its policies.
With respect, this statement creates many difficulties. First, McHugh J’s reference to ‘legal or equitable rights’ needs some qualification since, if read literally, this might imply that a claim in contract could be brought in respect of a contract prohibited by statute. However, that could not have been his intention.68 These principles do not apply to cases where the contract is prohibited by statute. Second, the words ‘arose out of or were associated with an unlawful purpose’ are both too broad and too narrow. They are too broad in the sense that they beg the question of what ‘unlawful purpose’ was involved. They are too narrow in the sense that it has never been the law that an ‘association’ with an ‘unlawful purpose’ is enough to bar a plaintiff ’s claim. Indeed, in some contexts it is clear that an unlawful purpose will not prevent a claim being brought in contract. Third, the shift from specific exceptions to general principle creates major analytical problems. It is by no means certain that the law is advanced by the approach suggested by McHugh J, which is in terms limited to cases of illegality
arising from the operation of statute. It is therefore still appropriate to consider the categories of case in which the maxim will not apply. These comprise: since innocence may arise from matters such as mistake, or the fraud or duress of the defendant, account must be taken of the knowledge of the plaintiff, the conduct of the defendant and the relationship between the parties;69 the fact that the plaintiff has repented of the illegal purpose may need to be considered;70 there is sometimes the possibility of equitable relief;71 and in the case of statutory illegality, there may be an implied right to sue operating for the benefit of persons protected by the statute.72 [page 607]
Action by a Party Not in Pari Delicto73 [27-11] No knowledge of illegality. In some cases the plaintiff has succeeded, notwithstanding an element of illegality in the contract or its performance, because of the absence of knowledge of the illegality. Thus, in Archbolds (Freightage) Ltd v S Spanglett Ltd74 the plaintiffs succeeded in their action for damages in respect of the loss of goods the subject of a contract of carriage even though the defendants had contravened the Road and Rail Traffic Act 1933 (UK) by carrying goods for reward without possessing the appropriate licence for carriage. The plaintiffs did not know that the defendants did not have the necessary licence and there was no evidence that they ought to have known. They were therefore not in pari delicto. The position would, however, have been different had the making of the contract been prohibited by statute or had it been illegal on its face.75 [27-12] Oppression and duress. The parties are not considered in pari delicto if one has entered into the contract as the result of oppression or duress by the other party.76 Oppression has, however, rarely been established and the exception has traditionally been treated as a narrow one.77 A wider view was perhaps taken in Andrews v Parker.78 Stable J did not regard the contract as contrary to public policy by being immoral.79 However, he found that the plaintiff entered into the contract in issue as a result of the pressure of a ‘strong-
willed’ and ‘ruthless’ woman. Therefore, on the assumption that the contract did contravene public policy, the plaintiff was not in pari delicto and was entitled to reconveyance of the property which he had transferred to the defendant. A plaintiff who can show that the contract was entered into as a result of oppression or duress may be entitled to equitable relief in the form of an order declaring the contract void and cancelling it.80 [27-13] Mistake and fraud. Where money has been paid under a mistake which would have made the contract legal, a plaintiff may be able to rely on an exception to the in pari delicto rule. The plaintiff will not be considered in pari delicto with the defendant if the defendant made a fraudulent misrepresentation as to the legality of the contract. Thus, if the defendant fraudulently concealed the nature of the transaction or the misrepresentation was of a fact which, if it had been true, would have made the contract legal, the plaintiff may succeed.81 Since the traditional [page 608] insistence on a mistake of fact rather than law can no longer be maintained, a representation of legality is sufficient.82 In Hatcher v White83 the defendant represented to the plaintiff that he held a permit under the Building Operations and Building Materials Control Act 1945 (NSW), and thereby induced the plaintiff to do certain construction work pursuant to a contract between the parties. In fact the defendant had no such permit and was guilty of fraud. The plaintiff suffered damage by expending money in doing the work and brought the present action to recover damages. Street CJ stated84 the ‘general principle’ as being that a ‘claim may be made in fraud by an innocent person’ who has entered into a contract as a result of a fraudulent misrepresentation that the ‘agreement could lawfully be entered into, if it was not on its face one which was obviously unlawful’. The plaintiff was innocent, and it was only the performance of the contract, not its making, which was illegal. Had the permit existed the contract would have been valid, but the contract was not on its face obviously illegal. Accordingly, a majority of the court held that the plaintiff was entitled to retain the damages which had been awarded in his favour in the District Court. There was no doubt that the plaintiff was unable to sue on the contract. The defendant would not have been estopped from setting up a defence of illegality to such a claim; but the action brought in
deceit was independent of the contract and illegality was not available as a defence to the claim based on the fraudulent misrepresentation. [27-14] Fiduciary relationship. The authorities support the existence of another reason for saying that the parties to an illegal contract may not be in pari delicto, namely, the abuse of a fiduciary position by one of the parties.85 Thus, in Re Ferguson86 Gibbs J explained that a person, such as a director of a company, ‘who is under a fiduciary duty to the plaintiff cannot retain moneys which he has received pursuant to an illegal arrangement’. Accordingly, a director who has abused a position of confidence cannot keep an illegal payment procured from his or her company.87 [page 609]
Performance and Repentance88 [27-15] Illegal purpose not carried out. If the contract is fully performed in a way which involves no illegality, the plaintiff ’s claim may succeed. An example is Payne v McDonald.89 The plaintiff brought an action for a declaration that the defendant held land as trustee for her because it had been purchased with money which she provided. The defence was that the plaintiff had procured the certificate of title to the land to be issued in the name of Ellen Payne in order to defeat the plaintiff ’s creditors, and that this unlawful purpose meant that no order should be made against the defendant who was the executor of Ellen Payne’s will. In fact, no creditors were defeated or defrauded because the plaintiff never found herself in the position where she could not pay her debts. In deciding in favour of the plaintiff, the High Court emphasised that the existence of an unlawful or sinister intent in the transaction was irrelevant as no part of the intent had been effectuated. It is a more difficult case where the contract is not performed fully because the plaintiff rescinds the contract and repents of the illegality. If no part of the illegal purpose has been carried out the Australian authorities support the proposition that a plaintiff who has paid money or transferred property to the defendant is entitled on rescission to restitution of the money paid or property transferred,90 provided the contract is not prohibited by statute.91 There are, obviously, numerous reasons why an illegal purpose might not have
been carried out. The particular reason may be material when considering whether the parties are in pari delicto. For example, if the reason the purpose has not been carried out is the frustration of that illegal purpose by a third party (or the defendant) the courts have been reluctant to allow that to be a basis for saying that the plaintiff was not in pari delicto. Thus, in Alexander v Rayson92 although the plaintiff ’s efforts to defraud the Westminster City Council were thwarted by the council’s discovery of the fraud, the court nevertheless refused to permit the enforcement of the contract by which the plaintiff had sought to perpetrate the fraud. [27-16] Partially executed contracts. To what extent must the contract be executory, when the plaintiff repents, in order to entitle the plaintiff to recover money or property transferred? In Clegg v Wilson93 Long Innes J concluded that a plaintiff is entitled to recover if rescission of the contract has occurred while the illegal purpose is still wholly executory and the defendant has not given legal consideration, even if the contract was itself [page 610] partially performed. He explained94 that the court should grant such a plaintiff equitable relief in the form of orders for the ‘repayment of money paid, goods delivered, or property transferred to the defendant pursuant to the contract, notwithstanding that there is an element of turpitude in the contract, and that both parties are in pari delicto’. It is not easy to reconcile Long Innes J’s conclusion with the prior authorities. For example, in George v Greater Adelaide Land Development Co Ltd95 Knox CJ treated Harse v Pearl Life Assurance Co96 as deciding that partial execution of the contract is fatal to a claim for money paid where the parties were in pari delicto at the time of payment. Similarly, in Kearley v Thomson97 the English Court of Appeal disapproved a statement made by Mellish LJ in Taylor v Bowers98 similar in effect to that expressed by Long Innes J in Clegg v Wilson. In support of Long Innes J’s statement of the law in Clegg v Wilson it can be said, first, that if repentance is to be encouraged the payment of money under a contract should not be regarded as necessarily involving the execution of the illegal purpose. Second, in George v Greater Adelaide Land Development Co Ltd the contract was prohibited by statute, and illegality based on public policy, as was in issue in Clegg v Wilson, has usually been treated more generously.99
Third, in Kearley v Thomson the illegal purpose was, it seems, substantially achieved,100 whereas Mellish LJ (in Taylor v Bowers) and Long Innes J were describing situations in which the purpose had not been carried into effect.101 [27-17] Payments made to stakeholders. Even if Long Innes J’s statement in Clegg v Wilson102 is wrong as regards payments made to another party to the contract, restitution is available from a third party who has received it as a stakeholder or quasi-stakeholder, provided that the illegal purpose has not otherwise been carried out.103 This is a claim against a person who has received money under instructions to pay it to one or other of the parties in certain defined circumstances. As Knox CJ said in George v Greater Adelaide Land Development Co Ltd,104 ‘where the action is to recover money deposited with a stakeholder to abide the event of an illegal contract the money can be recovered if notice be given to the stakeholder at any time before he has actually paid it over in pursuance of the contract’. [page 611] [27-18] Scope of the repentance exception. Three further matters touching the repentance exception should be mentioned. First, as can be implied from the discussion in the previous paragraph, repentance is of no relevance if the illegal purpose has been carried out wholly or substantially.105 Second, the exception does not apply if the making of the contract is prohibited by statute. For example, repentance would not have assisted the plaintiffs in George v Greater Adelaide Land Development Co Ltd.106 It may be, however, that the basis of this qualification is again the fact that the illegal purpose of the contract is regarded as having been carried out. Thus, in Marks v Jolly107 Jordan CJ said:108 Where, however, the contract is illegal because a statute prohibits the making of the contract, the illegal purpose is regarded as having been effected to some extent by the mere making of the contract; and hence money paid pursuant to such a contract cannot be recovered … unless it can be established that there is a special right to recover it arising out of some fraud, duress or undue influence which has been practised to induce the payment …
Finally, there is the issue of whether the motive for repentance is relevant. In Clegg v Wilson109 the plaintiff transferred her interest in certain property to the defendant, pursuant to a contract whereby the defendant promised to see that a criminal charge brought against the plaintiff ’s son would be withdrawn and the prosecutions discontinued. It was conceded that this contract was an illegal
attempt to stifle a prosecution.110 In an action to recover the property transferred, the plaintiff asserted that she had repented of the transaction and that the transfer should be set aside on that basis. The charge in question had in fact been withdrawn, not by reason of the defendant’s performance of the contract but, instead, because a number of other charges were brought. In respect of these charges the defendant had expressed a willingness to give evidence against the plaintiff ’s son. The plaintiff was aware of the contract’s illegal element, and Long Innes J found the plaintiff ’s prompt repentance to have been due to a realisation that, owing to the imminence of other charges, the contract would not achieve the desired result, namely, her son’s freedom from imprisonment. Nevertheless, he held that the plaintiff was entitled to the relief claimed. It is difficult to accept the view that the court should assist a party who repents on unmeritorious grounds, particularly where (as in Clegg v Wilson), the reason for repentance is the realisation that the illegal purpose has been frustrated.111 However, in Tribe v Tribe112 Millett LJ (with whom Otton LJ agreed) said that because restitution is not confined to the penitent, voluntary repentance at the appropriate time is sufficient. [page 612]
Equitable Relief [27-19] Equitable relief to protect public. An exception to the common law rule against the assistance of a party in pari delicto operates where equitable relief in favour of one party to an illegal contract is necessary to secure the protection of the public. For example, in Money v Money (No 2)113 a memorandum of transfer was executed by a husband with the object of transferring title to land owned by him to his wife. The consideration for this transfer was a promise by the wife, defendant in the action, not to take proceedings for maintenance against her husband, the plaintiff in the action. Alternatively, it was alleged that the consideration was the future separation of the parties. On either basis the agreement was contrary to public policy. Jacobs J found that there had been a partial execution of the contract and that the plaintiff was in pari delicto with the defendant. Therefore, relief in favour of the plaintiff, who sought a declaration that the defendant had no estate or interest in the land, would normally have
been denied. However, Jacobs J thought114 it appropriate to invoke the equitable jurisdiction of the court, ‘to order delivery up of instruments such as bonds, negotiable instruments, or deeds upon which a party could sue at [common] law, where there [is] an illegal consideration and such consideration [does] not appear on the face of the document’ because the continued existence of the memorandum of transfer was a ‘source of possible confusion and fraud’. Moreover, any court which came to deal with an application by the defendant for maintenance would, in Jacobs J’s words,115 ‘be fettered in its approach by the illegal transaction itself ’. Since the illegal purpose was not substantially complete, it was appropriate to exercise the jurisdiction to order delivery up and cancellation of the memorandum of transfer, and delivery up of the certificate of title for the land. Although the equitable exception applied in Money v Money (No 2) has traditionally been regarded as a special one, there are indications in Fitzgerald v F J Leonhardt Pty Ltd116 of a more general jurisdiction justifying the imposition of terms where the ‘plaintiff seeks equitable relief, whether in aid of a legal or equitable right’.
Statute [27-20] Statute protective of a class. A well-accepted basis117 for the recovery of money or property paid or transferred under a contract applies if:118 (1) the contract is contrary to statute (rather than public policy); and [page 613] (2) the statute has as its object the protection of a particular class of persons (of which the plaintiff is a member) rather than some other objective. As Lord Mansfield said in Browning v Morris:119 [W]here contracts or transactions are prohibited by positive statutes, for the sake of protecting one set of men from another set of men, the one, from their situation and condition, being liable to be oppressed or imposed upon by the other; there the parties are not in pari delicto; and in furtherance of these statutes, the person injured, after the transaction is finished and completed, may bring his action and defeat the contract.
Thus, the exception will not apply where the statute is for the protection of the
public generally, rather than a particular class of the public. For example, in South Australian Cold Stores Ltd v Electricity Trust of South Australia120 electricity was supplied by the trust at prices in excess of those which were the maximum permitted under the Prices Act 1948–1951 (SA). South Australian Cold Stores sought restitution of the amount paid in excess of the lawful prices. Napier CJ’s judgment in the Supreme Court of South Australia for the trust was upheld by the High Court on the basis that the Act was directed to the regulation of prices generally. However, it is not necessary to show that a party relying on the exception was in fact oppressed or exploited by the other party to the contract.121 Nor does the exception depend on the statute expressly making provision for a claim by a member of the class.122 For example, in Kiriri Cotton Co Ltd v Dewani123 the plaintiff paid a sum of money (a ‘premium’) to the defendants in order to secure the lease of a flat. This payment contravened the Rent Restriction Ordinance 1949 (Uganda) and was therefore illegal. The lease was subsequently executed and the plaintiff became lessee of the flat. The issue before the Privy Council was whether the plaintiff could recover the premium as restitution. Neither party knew that there was any illegality involved in the payment and receipt of the money, and the amount paid was not extortionate. But the payment was nevertheless illegal. The statute conferred no express right of recovery. Nor could it be argued that repentance had taken place since the money had been paid and the lease executed. However, the Board did not consider that the plaintiff was in pari delicto with the defendants. Section 3(2) of the Ordinance provided for the imposition of penalties on the person who ‘asks for, solicits or receives’ a premium. Thus, the duty of observing the law was placed on the defendants and the statutory penalty was imposed on lessors such as the defendants, for the protection of lessees, such as the plaintiff. Therefore, the fact that there was no express right of recovery did not preclude [page 614] implication by the Board of a right of restitution based on common law principles.124
Independent Causes of Action
The Bowmakers Principle125 [27-21] The decision in the Bowmakers case. One of the most controversial and difficult aspects of illegality is the so-called ‘Bowmakers principle’, derived from the decision of the English Court of Appeal in Bowmakers Ltd v Barnet Instruments Ltd.126 The plaintiffs sued to recover damages for the conversion127 of certain machine tools which were the subject of three contracts of hirepurchase. The plaintiffs had purchased the goods from one Smith and hired them to the defendants under three hire-purchase agreements. The acts amounting to conversion were alleged to have occurred prior to the payment of the money due under the agreements. The defence of illegality arose from the fact that Orders made by the Ministry of Supply, applicable to the goods comprised in the agreements, were alleged to have been contravened. The court assumed that all three agreements were affected by illegality, but held that the plaintiffs’ claim was not brought in reliance on the agreements. The plaintiffs were enforcing their right to possession: they owned the machine tools because the sale by Smith had been effective to transfer title to the plaintiffs. The court explained the law as follows:128 Prima facie, a man is entitled to his own property, and it is not a general principle of our law (as was suggested) that when one man’s goods have got into another’s possession in consequence of some unlawful dealings between them, the true owner can never be allowed to recover those goods by an action. The necessity of such a principle to the interests and advancement of public policy is certainly not obvious. The suggestion that it exists is not, in our opinion, supported by authority … In our opinion, a man’s right to possess his own chattels will as a general rule be enforced against anyone who, without any claim of right, is detaining them, or has converted them to his own use, even though it may appear either from the pleadings, or in the course of the trial, that the chattels in question came into the defendant’s possession by reason of an illegal contract between himself and the plaintiff, provided that the plaintiff does not seek, and is not forced, either to found his claim on the illegal contract or to plead its illegality in order to support his claim.
Because the plaintiffs were able to assert their ownership of the goods, and to prove a cause of action in conversion without relying on the illegal contracts, they were able to succeed. Although the decision has twice been approved by the High Court,129 the case creates several difficulties. [page 615] It seems clear that the court adopted the position that it was necessary, but sufficient, for the plaintiff to establish the right to possession independently of
the contract. The independent cause of action could then be enforced. Thus, in conceiving exceptions to the principle, for example, in respect of goods with which it is unlawful to deal at all, the court referred to situations where the plaintiff is unable to establish the proprietary right. In Gollan v Nugent130 the High Court approved this limited exception. The difficulty most relevant to the present discussion is how the plaintiffs were able to assert their ownership without relying on the hire-purchase contracts. This is not clearly explained and it can be argued, for example, that in order to prove a right to possession the plaintiffs had to show a right to terminate the contracts, and the exercise of that right. That would, of course, have involved reliance on the agreements. It appears that the court took the view that where an action is brought by the owner of goods, and the defendant has possession pursuant to an illegal contract, it will be the defendant who is forced to set up the illegal contract. A second problem is this. If, as was conceded, and the court allowed, the sale by Smith to the plaintiffs was effective to transfer ownership, the hirepurchase agreements must have been effective to transfer a limited form of ownership, namely, a right to possession. Again the issue arises: how did the plaintiffs establish that the defendants ceased to have a right of possession without relying on the hire-purchase agreements to prove that the defendants had acted wrongfully? In respect of two agreements (numbered one and three by the court) the act of conversion was the sale of the goods and that might conceivably be regarded as having conferred a right to possession independently of the bailment contracts, it being presumed that a bailee would have no right to sell the bailor’s goods. But that argument was not available in respect of the other agreement, and it is clear that the commission of a breach under that contract, for example, by non-payment of hire, would not itself have terminated the contractual relationship.131 Surprisingly, the court does not appear to have regarded the point as significant. These and other problems have given rise to difficulty in the subsequent cases. For example, in Bassin v Standen,132 the Full Court of the Supreme Court of New South Wales cited Bowmakers for the propositions that no property in goods is transferred by virtue of a contract of sale which is prohibited by statute, and that the seller is entitled to assert title in an action in conversion. That court later said, in Newcastle District Fishermen’s Co-operative Society v Neal,133 that a proviso must be added to the proposition, to the effect that the plaintiff ’s claim must be independent of the contract. On the other hand, in Leonard v Booth134
Taylor J cited Bowmakers as an authority for the proposition that title to goods may be acquired in the course of dealings or activities which are unlawful. [page 616] Superficially at least, it would appear that the Bowmakers case can be cited for two contradictory general propositions of law. The scope of the Bowmakers decision is investigated below by considering its operation in the context of the personal actions of trespass, conversion and detinue in relation to contracts dealing with goods135 and affected by illegality.136 [27-22] Trespass. A person in possession of goods, or entitled to their immediate possession, has the right to recover damages for trespass against a person who unlawfully interferes with the goods by taking them out of the possession of the person legally in possession of the goods.137 Such a cause of action was relied upon by the plaintiff in Singh v Ali.138 The plaintiff was a lorry driver in need of a lorry and haulage permit to carry goods for reward. However, he had no prospect of obtaining such a permit. The defendant, on the other hand, had every chance of obtaining a permit and an agreement was reached that the defendant would acquire a second-hand lorry, register it and obtain a permit in his own name. However, the lorry was to belong to the plaintiff and be used by him on his own account. Accordingly, a vehicle was purchased by the defendant, and registered in his name, but paid for by the plaintiff. A document was signed stating that the defendant had sold the vehicle to the plaintiff. For some time the plaintiff operated the vehicle in the name of the defendant and this operation was illegal because the plaintiff did not possess a permit as required by statute. Subsequently, the parties fell out and the defendant removed the vehicle from the plaintiff ’s possession. Before the Privy Council the plaintiff sought to assert his ownership and to claim damages in detinue or for trespass by the defendant in wrongfully removing the vehicle from the plaintiff ’s possession and refusing to return it. The Board was satisfied that the document referred to above was genuine and that the transaction was effective to transfer title in the vehicle to the plaintiff, notwithstanding the illegality, because it was fully carried out by sale and delivery to the plaintiff. The plaintiff had been in possession of the vehicle at the time of its seizure by the defendant, and the plaintiff had an immediate right to
possession when the action was brought. Therefore, he was entitled to succeed in both trespass and detinue.139 On the other hand, had the plaintiff been forced to prove his title otherwise than by possession, he would have been in difficulty because of the absence of registration in his name. [page 617] [27-23] Conversion. An action in conversion, sometimes referred to as trover, is brought by a person entitled to the immediate possession of goods in respect of an act of conversion, such as a wrongful sale, by the defendant. The ‘essence of conversion’ Dixon J explained in Penfolds Wines Pty Ltd v Elliott,140 is a ‘dealing with a chattel in a manner repugnant to the immediate right of possession of the person who has the property or special property in the chattel’. The plaintiffs’ action in Bowmakers Ltd v Barnet Instruments Ltd141 was based on conversion of the machine tools. The success of the claim in that case can be contrasted with its failure in two Australian cases. The first is Thomas Brown & Sons Ltd v Fazal Deen.142 In 1943 the plaintiff deposited gold with the general manager of the defendants under an illegal bailment contract. When the plaintiff demanded the return of the goods they could not be found, the gold having disappeared from the defendants’ custody no later than April 1953. Actions were then brought in detinue143 and conversion. Although the bailment imposed an obligation on the defendants to keep the gold safe and to return it on demand, because it was an illegal arrangement the plaintiff could not succeed if it was necessary for him to rely on the contract. The High Court took the view that the facts of Bowmakers differed materially. In that case the title of the plaintiffs, as well as the defendants’ act of conversion, had been conceded, and the plaintiffs were able to make out their claim without relying on the hirepurchase contracts. In Fazal Deen there were no such concessions and the action in conversion was barred by the Statute of Limitations. However, it is unclear whether the High Court would have decided in the plaintiff ’s favour had the action not been statute barred. The second case is Newcastle District Fishermen’s Co-operative Society v Neal,144 decided prior to Fazal Deen but not referred to by the High Court in that case. The plaintiff sued to recover damages for the conversion of a quantity of fish sold to the defendants in contravention of the Fisheries and Oyster Farms Act 1935 (NSW). The act of conversion relied on was the sale by the defendants
without payment to the plaintiff. Because the contract was illegal it was essential for the plaintiff to establish his cause of action without relying on the contract. The Full Court of the Supreme Court of New South Wales held he was unable to do so. Street CJ said that, in order for the plaintiff to prove that the defendants’ act was wrongful, reliance on the contract was necessary. Merely proving that the fish had been delivered by the plaintiff was not sufficient because that would be consistent with a gift having been made. Thus, the act of the defendants was only wrongful if the plaintiff could rely on non-payment under the contract of sale. Street CJ distinguished Bowmakers on the basis of the concessions of ownership and conversion in that case. Maxwell J and Owen J, in separate judgments, by similar reasoning concluded that the plaintiff had to fail because it was necessary for him to disclose the illegal nature of the transaction and to rely on it. [page 618] Leaving aside the concessions made in Bowmakers, why was it that property in the fish never passed to the defendants in the Newcastle case? There are two possible reasons to be considered. First, the contract, unlike that in Singh v Ali,145 was not fully executed. Second, property does not pass under a contract of sale affected by illegality. The first reason seems somewhat technical and the second is inconsistent with the Bowmakers case. However, if property did pass, the case is clearly distinguishable from Bowmakers since the plaintiff could show that the defendants’ act was wrongful only by relying on nonperformance of the contract. It is suggested that this is the better explanation of the Newcastle case. Although the principle stated in Bowmakers has been accepted as correct,146 Fazal Deen and the Newcastle case indicate that there is little scope for the application of the case in Australia. To some extent this is because of the importance attached to the concessions made in the Bowmakers case. The defendants certainly conceded that the general property (that is, ownership) in the machine tools rested with the plaintiffs at the time of the conversion. However, the purpose of that concession was probably to reinforce the argument that the defendants had obtained special property (their right to possession) in the goods by virtue of the illegal hire-purchase agreements. The real difficulty of the case lies in explaining how the plaintiffs were able to assert their ownership, and it is arguable that this issue was not fully dealt with in the Newcastle case.
Moreover, even if the defendants in Bowmakers conceded that their actions amounted to conversion, they did not concede that the plaintiffs were entitled to maintain their cause of action without relying on the illegal contracts. The plaintiffs were successful because the defendants had to defend the action by relying on the illegal nature of the hire-purchase agreements. In Fazal Deen the position was different since it was the plaintiff who was relying on the illegal bailment contract. [27-24] Detinue. Unlike the other actions referred to, the gist of detinue is not the wrongful taking of goods. Rather, it is the wrongful detention of goods after the plaintiff ’s lawful request for their return.147 Thus, in Singh v Ali148 the plaintiff was able to recover in detinue because he was the owner of the lorry and had, in the Board’s view, made a lawful demand for its return without relying on the illegal contract for sale. However, because the vehicle was registered in the defendant’s name, it is difficult to see how the defendant’s detention of the lorry could be regarded as wrongful unless the plaintiff was permitted to rely on the terms under which the sale took place. The mere intention to engage in criminal conduct is not enough to deny the plaintiff the right to possession.149 On the other hand, in Taylor v Chester150 an action in respect of half of a £50 Bank of England note in the defendant’s possession failed. The half-note had been pledged as security for the payment of a debt arising out of the supply to the defendant, the [page 619] keeper of a brothel and disorderly house, of wine and suppers for the purpose of being consumed in a debauch in the brothel. To succeed in detinue it was necessary for the plaintiff to show the illegal and immoral character of the contract. He could not rely solely on his title to the halfnote because the pledge was effective to transfer a limited (possessory) title to the half-note, and the plaintiff could only avoid the defendant’s title by relying on the illegal nature of the contract. Thus, the plaintiff sought to rely on the illegality in order to establish that the defendant’s possession of the half-note was wrongful, and this was not permissible.151 A claim in detinue was also unsuccessful in Thomas Brown & Sons Ltd v Fazal Deen.152 Because the claim in conversion was barred by the Statute of Limitations, the plaintiff argued that a fresh cause of action arose when the return
of the gold was demanded in 1959. The refusal to hand over the gold occurred six years later than the act of conversion, and was not statute barred as the action was commenced in 1960. However, the High Court said that, in order to succeed, the plaintiff had to invoke the bailment contract. In other words, the plaintiff was required to show that the defendants had failed to comply with an obligation imposed by the bailment contract, namely, to redeliver the goods on demand, and as the bailment contract was illegal the plaintiff failed. Thus, he could not invoke the Bowmakers principle because his right to possession depended on proof of the terms of the bailment, whereas in Bowmakers it was possible for the plaintiffs to assert their ownership without reliance on the illegal hirepurchase agreements.
Statutory Cause of Action and Claim on Collateral Contract [27-25] Statute. Occasionally a plaintiff is presented with the opportunity of basing an independent cause of action on a statutory provision. In Ison v Australian Wheat Board153 the plaintiff, a grain dealer, purchased wheat from growers and received possession of it in contravention of the Wheat Industry Stabilization Act 1958 (NSW). Subsequently, the defendants obtained possession and the plaintiff was convicted of an offence under the Act. The plaintiff alleged that he was entitled under ss 11 and 12 of the Act to the price of the wheat. Section 11 stated the rules applicable in determining payments which the defendants were required to make when wheat was delivered to them pursuant to the Act. Section 12 provided that the amount payable under the Act was ‘payable to the person who would have been entitled to receive the price of the wheat if the wheat had been lawfully sold’ to the defendants at the time of the delivery of the wheat. There was no doubt that the (antecedent) contracts between the plaintiff and the wheat growers were illegal, and also that the plaintiff was in pari delicto. But those transactions were completely executed and title had passed under them to the plaintiff. Therefore, if the plaintiff could establish [page 620] ownership and possession without relying on those transactions he would be entitled to recover payment under the Act.
Possession was a merely factual matter. At the time the defendants demanded the wheat, the plaintiff and his agents were in actual possession and so the plaintiff did not need to rely on the illegal contracts to establish possession. But could the plaintiff lawfully have sold the wheat? The court took the view that the plaintiff could prove that without reliance on the illegal transactions. Had those transactions not been performed the plaintiff would have failed because he would have been required to establish rights under the contracts. His right to sell did not depend on an ability to enforce the transactions because they were fully executed. In the result the plaintiff was able to assert his statutory right. Additionally, the plaintiff had given evidence, which was not objected to, that he was the owner of the wheat and that no other person had any interest in the wheat. [27-26] Collateral contract. If the defendant has promised that a contract will be performed legally, and the plaintiff entered into the contract in consideration of that promise being given, the plaintiff may be able to enforce the guarantee as a collateral contract.154 Thus, in Strongman (1945) Ltd v Sincock155 the defendant, an architect, undertook that he would obtain the licences which might be needed for building work being done by the plaintiffs, a firm of builders. In fact, the builders did work in excess of the amounts for which licences had been obtained and the excess work was therefore illegal under the Defence (General) Regulations 1939 (UK). When the builders sued to recover the balance due under the building contract, the architect raised the defence of illegality. It was clear that the plaintiffs could not recover on the building contract for anything in excess of that authorised by the licence. However, the plaintiffs argued that the excess work had been done because of a promise by the defendant to obtain a supplementary licence and that as this promise (contract) was collateral to the illegal contract an action for damages was available when the defendant failed to obtain the licence as promised. The English Court of Appeal agreed that a case for relief on that basis had been made out, and that the illegality of the main contract was no bar to an action on the collateral contract. However, it was also said that the plaintiffs would have been denied relief had they been guilty of ‘culpable negligence’. There was no evidence of this, that is, there were no circumstances from which it could be implied that the plaintiffs were grossly careless in not asking to inspect the defendant’s licence. Had the defendant been an ordinary home owner having building work done, and not an architect, it might have been open to the court to deny relief on the basis of culpable negligence because in such a case the primary duty of obtaining the licence would rest on the builder, who ought to
inspect the licence and not rely on the word of the home owner. [page 621]
Restitution156 [27-27] Restitution as an independent basis for recovery. An action for restitution may be brought in respect of a benefit conferred on the defendant if the elements of unjust enrichment are established.157 In some cases, conduct which is illegal may be a basis for restitution. For example, where a plaintiff pays money to a defendant as a result of the latter’s fraud, the fact that the defendant may have engaged in criminal conduct cannot be a defence to the claim. The contract is not illegal, and may be rescinded for fraud. Following rescission, the defendant’s fraud is treated as the basis upon which the plaintiff is entitled to restitution. This illustration shows that proof that a contract is ineffective may sometimes be an element of a claim in restitution. However, the fact that a contract is ineffective is not of itself a sufficient basis for allowing a claim in restitution. Thus, in cases where reliance on an illegal contract is necessary to establish the claim, it will normally fail. The usual context for the discussion of illegality in the law of restitution is therefore as a defence to an otherwise valid claim.158 For example, in George v Greater Adelaide Land Development Co Ltd159 a purchaser paid part of the purchase price under a contract for the sale of certain allotments of land which contravened the Town Planning and Development Act 1920 (SA). The court held160 the money to be irrecoverable because it was paid to a party to the contract pursuant to the contract. The impact of this approach is to restrict restitutionary claims to situations where the parties were not equally at fault (in pari delicto).161 However, a broader approach has been suggested in the more recent cases. Thus, McHugh and Gummow JJ said in Fitzgerald v F J Leonhardt Pty Ltd:162 [A]s was pointed out in Hurst v Vestcorp Ltd (1988) 12 NSWLR 394 at 445–6, what may now be classified as restitutionary remedies may be available to assist in the striking of a balance. For example, it was held long ago that where a borrower had paid interest in excess of the rate permitted by statute, whilst the debtor could not recover the whole back, an action would lie to recover the surplus. (Smith v Bromley, reported as a Note to Jones v Barkley (1781) 2 Dougl 684 at 697; 99 ER 434 at 444 … .) The use of the quantum meruit in Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul (1987) 162 CLR 221; 69 ALR 577 may be seen as another example. Set-off may also have a role to play in adjusting the respective final positions of the parties.
[page 622] [27-28] Claims for restitution. The two principal claims in restitution are to recover money paid and to recover the reasonable value of services rendered or goods supplied. The former usually depends on proof of total failure of consideration,163 and the latter on ‘acceptance’ of the benefit.164 Restitution will be available where the illegality was just an historical fact. For example, in Strang v Owens165 the plaintiff, who owned a ‘disorderly house and sly grog shop’, sought to recover £500 from the defendant. It was established that the money had been earned in the plaintiff ’s illegal and immoral business and that it was deposited with the defendant’s father (who assisted the plaintiff in the business) as trustee for the plaintiff. The defendant’s father had wrongfully withdrawn the money and placed it in a joint bank account in the names of himself and the defendant. The plaintiff was not seeking to enforce a right arising out of the illegal business or an agreement between herself and the defendant. In fact, she was merely asserting that money belonging to her had been appropriated by the defendant’s father and was now in the possession of the defendant. Restitution is also available where the parties are not equally at fault. Indeed, in that context money paid may be recovered whether or not there was a total failure of consideration.166 However, the fact that there was a total failure of consideration is not of itself a sufficient justification for the recovery of money paid if the court is being asked to reopen an illegal transaction. Illegality will be a valid defence.167 A claim to recover as on a quantum meruit must usually fail if there was an illegal contract, because some reference to and reliance on the illegality is inevitable and necessary. For example, in Wild v Simpson168 Atkin LJ said that if an employment contract is illegal the employee is not entitled to recover a reasonable sum for services rendered. Again, where a contract between solicitor and client is illegal by reason of champerty,169 the solicitor cannot recover ordinary costs as on a quantum meruit.170 There is, however, some support for a distinction between common law illegality and illegality under statute. In the latter context, authority is against the success of a claim as on a quantum meruit.171 In the case of contracts illegal at common law the possibility of the claim being successful is less remote.172
[page 623] Because a restitutionary claim depends on proof of an unjust enrichment it is not a claim in contract.173 The controversial point is whether there is a more general basis for recovery of restitution, arising from the fact that it is not contractual. As already indicated,174 generally, a claim based on unjust enrichment has not been regarded as sufficiently independent of the contract to form a distinct exception to the ex turpi rule. However, in Hurst v Vestcorp Ltd175 McHugh JA stated, as a general principle, that restitution for unjust enrichment may be available even where a contract is prohibited by statute, provided there is no legislative intent to deny the claim, if the defendant would otherwise obtain an ‘unmerited benefit’. Although it is not easy to reconcile this principle with the approach traditionally taken to restitution in the context of statutory illegality, it was approved by McHugh and Gummow JJ in Fitzgerald v F J Leonhardt Pty Ltd.176 This would seem to imply that, under the guidance of unjust enrichment, courts should always inquire whether a prohibition on claims in contract was intended to extend to claims in restitution. The policy which prohibits a claim in contract may in particular cases not extend to claims in restitution.177 Just how this can be reconciled with cases such as George v Greater Adelaide Land Development Co Ltd178 has not, however, been explained. But in Equuscorp Pty Ltd (formerly Equus Financial Services Ltd) v Haxton,179 French CJ, Crennan, Kiefel and Bell JJ said that the ‘central policy consideration at stake … is the coherence of the law’. Restitution was therefore denied in respect of payments made under certain loan agreements which were an integral part of schemes which were illegal under the companies legislation. The failure of consideration relied on was the product of conduct under which the loan agreements were offered in furtherance of an illegal purpose. French CJ, Crennan, Kiefel and Bell JJ regarded180 the case as one in which the ‘coherence of the law, and the avoidance of stultification of the statutory purpose by the common law’ justified denial of the claim. [page 624]
Severance181
General [27-29] Forms of severance. There are two main forms of severance. First, a term182 of a contract which is itself invalid may be severable from the rest of the contract so as to permit enforcement of the remainder. This form of severance cannot occur if all the promises by one party are invalid, since in such a case no consideration is provided for the enforcement of the valid promises.183 The second form of severance arises if a term is partially invalid and the invalid part can be severed so as to permit enforcement of the remainder of the term. In addition to these cases of severance within the contract184 there is a third form of severance relating to associated transactions.185 An invalid contract may be associated with one or more other contracts and the issue may arise whether the other contracts are also invalid or, instead, severable from the invalid contract. [27-30] Test of severance. The cases on severance in the context of uncertainty186 emphasise the intention of the parties as the key to severance. For example, in Fitzgerald v Masters187 a contract for the sale of an interest in land purported to incorporate the ‘usual conditions of sale in use or approved of by the Real Estate Institute of New South Wales relating to sales by private contract of lands held under the Crown Lands Act’. There were in fact no such ‘usual conditions of sale’. This raised the issue of severance. Did the parties intend to contract otherwise than by reference to the terms which were referred to but did not exist? Since the parties had reached agreement on all the essential matters there was no justification for imputing an intention which would have brought down the whole contract on the failure of the clause in issue. Accordingly, severance took place. Intention is also emphasised in most of the cases on illegality. For example, in Brooks v Burns Philp Trustee Co Ltd188 Taylor J said that ‘fundamentally the question is one of intention to be gathered from the instrument itself ’. The fact that each case is likely to turn so much on terms of the contract, their relationship to one another and the parties’ choice of words, gives some support to the view that it is difficult to adopt a single formula to all cases of severance.189 Because every contract is different, and because the parties do not foresee the possibility that invalidity will affect the contract,190 it is usually necessary to impute an intention to the parties.
[page 625] Tests for severance are therefore essential. Moreover, in the illegality context, intention cannot be the sole criterion.191 In McFarlane v Daniell192 Jordan CJ stated:193 When valid promises supported by legal consideration are associated with, but separate in form from, invalid promises, the test of whether they are severable is whether they are in substance so connected with the others as to form an indivisible whole which cannot be taken to pieces without altering its nature … If the elimination of the invalid promises changes the extent only but not the kind of the contract, the valid promises are severable … If the substantial promises were all illegal or void, merely ancillary promises would be inseverable.
This test, which has been approved and applied on a number of occasions,194 focuses on the effect of severance and asks whether the nature of the contract will be changed. If it would alter only the ‘extent’ of the contract, severance can take place; but altering the ‘nature’ of the contract is not permitted under the guise of severance. It is, of course, far easier to state a test of severance than to apply it. As Kitto J observed in Brooks v Burns Philp Trustee Co Ltd,195 ‘questions of severability are often difficult’. The formulation of Jordan CJ is not an exclusive test.196 In Carney v Herbert197 the Privy Council said there are two matters to be considered: first, whether ‘as a matter of construction’ or intention the lawful part can be severed from the unlawful part; and, second, ‘whether, despite severability, there is a bar to enforceability’ arising out of the illegality. [27-31] Relevant considerations. The process of severance requires the court to draw on a number of considerations. First, and at the most general level, there is the issue of whether severance must be decided by reference to the common law or under statute.198 For example, the Restraints of Trade Act 1976 (NSW) provides a statutory form of severance which is much more generous than the common law. Second, as explained above,199 it is necessary to take account of the intention of the parties. Severance cannot occur if it would be inconsistent with the parties’ intention. Third, the reason for invalidity is important. The courts have been slow to apply the principles of severance to contracts which are illegal in the strictest sense, as in the case of a contract to commit a serious crime.200 For example, in McFarlane v Daniell201 Jordan CJ said it could ‘hardly be
[page 626] imagined’ that a court would enforce a promise ‘however inherently valid and however severable, if contained in a contract one of the terms of which provided for assassination’. Fourth, the type of contract may be relevant. For example, in the context of contracts in restraint of trade, the courts have shown a greater willingness towards severing covenants in cases involving contracts for the sale of businesses than in cases involving contracts of employment. It is unusual for severance to take place where an employment contract contains a covenant in restraint of trade.202 On the other hand, although the necessity for consideration in a simple contract may ‘introduce an additional element to be taken into account’,203 severance in the context of a deed is no different from severance in the context of a simple contract.204 Fifth, there is the factor which is the main basis for the mode of analysis adopted below, namely, the form of severance. It is probably easier to establish that transactions are severable than to establish that terms in a single contract are severable. Similarly, it is easier to establish that terms in a contract are severable than to establish that part of a term is severable.
Severance at Common Law Severance of associated transactions [27-32] Transactions associated with illegal contracts. The mere fact that a contract is to some extent connected or associated with an illegal contract is not a sufficient basis for saying that it must also be regarded as invalid. For example, in Dalgety and New Zealand Loan Ltd v C Imeson Pty Ltd205 the court considered that the statutory prohibition of a contract of sale between A and B did not necessarily imply that a contract between B and C, under which C provided B with finance, was also invalid. In such a case the validity of the related contract can be approached either from the point of view of the scope of the statutory prohibition or the degree of connection between the illegal contract and the related transaction. If the statutory prohibition extends to the related transaction no question of severance can arise. But, if the prohibition does not
extend so far, the degree of connection becomes the measure of severance. In Noble v Maddison206 the plaintiff was a partner with the defendant in a series of contracts. Some of these contracts were illegal because the plaintiff occupied a government post and had placed himself in the position where his public duty conflicted with his private interest in the contracts.207 In respect of one contract there was no conflict of interest and duty and that contract was not illegal. The question then arose whether this contract [page 627] could be enforced. Rich J held that a separate partnership existed in respect of each contract, and also that the illegality of the other contracts was no bar to the enforcement of the associated transaction.208 [27-33] Transactions associated with contracts in restraint of trade. In Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd209 the High Court held void certain provisions in an underlease from Amoco to Rocca. The question then arose whether the whole of the underlease was ‘void’ and, if so, whether the head lease, from Rocca to Amoco, was also void. In Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd [No 2]210 the Privy Council held that the whole of the underlease was void because the covenants which were in restraint of trade could not be severed. It also held that the underlease was not severable from the lease. The Board said that no distinction was to be drawn between the consequences of invalidity in contracts generally and covenants in leases.211 As to the severability of the two transactions, Lord Cross, delivering the Board’s advice, said212 it was impossible ‘to regard the two leases as separate dispositions of property’. The two transactions (lease and underlease) were very closely connected. In substance there was a ‘single commercial transaction’ under which Rocca was ‘to get a supply of petrol at an agreed rebate’ and Amoco a ‘trade tie with security for its investment in the station’. Severance was not made possible by cl 18 of the lease which stated that the lease was ‘not in consideration for or dependent or contingent in any manner upon any other contract’ and that its provisions were ‘entirely and completely independent of any other transaction or relationship between the parties’. Lord Cross said that these statements were ‘untrue’ and may have been inserted in order to place Amoco in a stronger bargaining position in any challenge by Rocca to the
validity of the underlease.
Severance within the contract [27-34] Court will not rewrite the contract. Time and time again the courts have said that they will not rewrite the contract for the parties, in order to achieve severability.213 Accordingly, the court will not reduce the length or scope of a covenant in restraint of trade except by the excision of words. And even then the substance of the contract must remain unchanged. For example, in Lindner v Murdock’s Garage214 the restraint clause in the defendant’s employment contract was held to be invalid because it applied not only to Crystal Brook, where the defendant was employed, but also to Wirrabara where the defendant had not been [page 628] employed. The High Court rejected an argument that the restraint clause should be seen as embodying two severable restrictions. Kitto J said215 it was ‘quite consistent with the agreement’ that he might be employed at either place. In his view, ‘in order to be valid’ the clause should ‘have been so limited in respect of each area as not to operate therein unless’ the defendant was employed ‘in that area within some specified reasonable period preceding the termination of his service’. [27-35] Severance of part of a term. In some of the cases a term which, taken as a whole, infringes public policy, has been severed so as to permit enforcement of a valid part of the term. The criterion to apply was stated by Lord Moulton in Mason v Provident Clothing and Supply Co Ltd216 as being whether the ‘excess is of trivial importance, or merely technical, and not a part of the main purport and substance’ of the term. Although this form of severance is the most difficult to establish, the courts are a little more flexible in their approach today than when Lord Moulton stated the test. Most cases have concerned covenants in restraint of trade.217 Before severance within a term can become an issue for decision, the term must be of a severable nature. For example, in Attwood v Lamont,218 where the defendant was employed as a cutter and head of the tailoring department of the
plaintiff, it was argued that the term in issue was severable to the extent that the enumerated trades, other than that of a tailor, could be struck out and the covenant enforced to prohibit the defendant being concerned in the tailoring trade. The English Court of Appeal rejected this argument. Lord Sterndale MR said219 that severance would ‘alter entirely the scope and intention of the agreement’. Atkin LJ agreed with Younger LJ, whose judgment has ever since been regarded as expressing the proper approach. He rejected a mechanical approach to severance accomplished by striking a blue pencil through the infringing parts of the clause. He said220 that the doctrine of severance has not ‘gone further than to make it permissible in a case where the covenant is not really a single covenant but is in effect a combination of several distinct covenants’. Severance was not possible, even though it was possible to strike a blue pencil through the entire covenant except that part relating to tailoring, because there was in fact one covenant for the protection of the plaintiff ’s entire business. It was impossible to say that the plaintiff was carrying on several businesses, and therefore impossible to treat the covenant as stating several covenants for the protection of several businesses. Accordingly, the court could not sever that part of the covenant which related to tailoring. In any event the covenant was held to be too wide in its application to the tailoring trade. [27-36] Severance of a whole term. One way in which the issue of severance within a contract can be decided is by reference to the [page 629] relationship of the term sought to be severed with other important terms of the contract. If the remaining terms are dependent on the term which is sought to be severed, severance is not possible; whereas if the terms are independent severance can take place. Dependency occurs if the obligation to perform one term is dependent (or contingent) on the validity or performance of another,221 and implies that the parties intended performance to take place only if the invalid term was valid or performed. The effect of severance in such a case would be to alter the nature and effect of the contract. For example, in Brooks v Burns Philp Trustee Co Ltd222 the plaintiffs sought determination of the question whether the defendant was entitled to £25 per week under a deed between the defendant and her husband. Clause 1 was a covenant by the husband which entitled her to receive
such payments, but cl 2 was invalid as purporting to oust the jurisdiction of the courts. The issue was whether cl 2 could be severed, so as to permit enforcement of the covenant in cl 1. A majority of the High Court decided that severance was not possible because the covenant sought to be enforced was dependent on the invalid covenant.223 Kitto J said224 the ‘intended reciprocity of obligation’ between the covenants was sufficiently clear ‘to necessitate an inference that the legal validity’ of each covenant was a ‘condition of the operation of the other’. Similarly, Windeyer J, who dissented on whether cl 2 purported to oust the jurisdiction of the courts, said225 that the covenants were ‘dependent, not independent, covenants’. Another approach, favoured to some extent by Taylor J in Brooks’ case, is to ask whether the term held to be invalid is the sole or main consideration for the term sought to be enforced. Severance may take place if the invalid term is not the sole or main consideration for the term sought to be enforced. Thus, in Alec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil (Great Britain) Ltd226 covenants in a lease which were in restraint of trade were severable from the remainder of the lease. If it is clear that this is the case, severance will not take place. In Brooks’ case Windeyer J said the issue is not easily resolved ‘because, for more than three hundred years, courts of common law have said that they will not inquire into the adequacy of a consideration or weigh the inducements of a promise’.227 In fact, the cases illustrating this approach look more to the effect on the contract as a whole than to one party’s consideration so that, in effect, ‘consideration’ in the present context means ‘performance of the contract’. Therefore, the issue is whether the parties will receive the performance for which they bargained.228 [page 630] [27-37] Position where contract illegal. Nearly all the cases on severance within an illegal contract have involved contracts in restraint of trade or those which purport to oust the jurisdiction of the courts. The courts have been reluctant to sever a contract which is prohibited by statute or is contrary to public policy because it involves particularly wicked conduct, such as the commission of a serious crime. Thus, in McFarlane v Daniell229 Jordan CJ considered it ‘difficult to see how, in principle, a legal promise associated with an illegal promise can ever be enforceable unless it is supported solely by a separate consideration so exclusively attributable to it that there are in substance two independent contracts and not one composite contract’. For example, in DJE
Constructions Pty Ltd v Maddocks230 a provision for payment was not severable where it was an integral part of an agreement which (if it existed) was illegal by virtue of a prohibition in the companies legislation on the giving of financial assistance to enable the purchase of its shares. Street CJ said231 the ‘principles relating to severability were developed in connection with contractual clauses void for uncertainty and for restraint of trade, and not in cases involving contracts illegal and void’. It is, however, clear from the High Court’s decision in Thomas Brown & Sons Ltd v Fazal Deen232 that severance of an illegal contract is sometimes possible. It was explained earlier233 that the plaintiff had deposited a quantity of gold with the defendants in contravention of the National Security (Exchange Control) Regulations (Cth). In addition, the plaintiff had deposited a quantity of gems and this did not contravene the Regulations. However, in form there was one contract of bailment and, given the reluctance to sever illegal contracts, one might have expected the court to decide that the illegality affected the bailment of the gems and to deny the plaintiff relief on that basis. However, the court severed the bailment contract, and permitted enforcement of that part which related to the gems, because the ‘contractual obligation’ of the defendants ‘as to the return of the plaintiff ’s property on demand applied to every part of the property deposited whether demanded together with the rest of it or separately’.234 This suggests that because the plaintiff could demand the return of any other part of the property bailed, the bailment of the gems was in effect distinct from the bailment of the gold. In Electric Acceptance Pty Ltd v Doug Thorley Caravans (Aust) Pty Ltd235 Brooking J explained Fazal Deen as illustrating the relevance of the character of the illegality. In his view severance was possible because the offence committed was not of a sufficiently heinous character to be a bar. Although the High Court did not expressly refer to such a consideration, it is one way of explaining the case. However, a wider view was taken by the Privy Council in Carney v Herbert.236 The illegal term was that payment of [page 631] the purchase price for shares in a company would be secured by mortgages to be provided by a subsidiary company of the company whose shares were the subject of the sale. The mortgages were void and illegal by reason of s 67 of the
Companies Act 1961 (NSW).237 The buyers contended that because of this, and notwithstanding that the shares had been transferred to them, they could not be compelled to pay the outstanding price. While acknowledging that it was undesirable, if not impossible, to lay down principles to cover all severance problems, Lord Brightman (delivering the advice) suggested238 that: [A]s a general rule, where parties enter into a lawful contract of, for example, sale and purchase, and there is an ancillary provision which is illegal but exists for the exclusive benefit of the plaintiff, the court may and probably will, if the justice of the case so requires, and there is no public policy objection, permit the plaintiff if he so wishes to enforce the contract without illegal provision.
The Privy Council said the contract was, basically, one for the sale of shares to which the mortgages were ancillary. The buyers wanted the shares, the sellers the purchase money and, only incidentally to the latter, adequate security for payment thereof. The sellers were therefore held to be entitled to enforce the contract of sale without the illegal mortgages.
Severance Under Statute [27-38] The Restraints of Trade Act 1976 (NSW).239 In New South Wales the severance of covenants in restraint of trade created on or after 15 November 1976 is governed by the Restraints of Trade Act 1976 (NSW).240 It seems clear that the Act was intended to overcome at least one feature of the common law governing the restraint of trade doctrine,241 a feature which was criticised by the New South Wales Law Reform Commission in its Report on Covenants in Restraint of Trade.242 This is the fact that the reasonableness of a restraint is determined by its widest possible application (consistent with the intention of the parties),243 rather than its application to the conduct in respect of which the covenantee seeks relief. For example, if a restraint covenant in a partnership deed prohibits competition by a retiring partner within a radius of 10 kilometres from the [page 632] partnership business, the covenant’s validity is determined at the boundary of the restraint. Thus, even if a retiring partner sets up a competing business which is, say, 50 metres from the partnership’s place of business, the restraint will be
invalid if a 10 kilometre restraint is unreasonable, notwithstanding that the same restraint, extending to a 50 metre radius, would be reasonable between the parties and not injurious to the public.244 Moreover, such a restraint would not be saved by the common law rules on severance245 because the court will not rewrite the covenant so as to make it extend only to a radius of 50 metres from the partnership business. The central provision is s 4(1) which states, simply, that a ‘restraint of trade is valid to the extent to which it is not against public policy, whether it is in severable terms or not’.246 This allows the court to ignore the fact that the restraint goes beyond what is reasonable if it can be enforced to an extent which is reasonable. If it stood alone s 4(1) would provide no incentive for the parties to try to arrive at a reasonable restraint. In Mason v Provident Clothing and Supply Co Ltd247 Lord Moulton deprecated the application by the courts of their ‘ingenuity and knowledge of the law’ in order to ‘carve out’ of a void covenant the ‘maximum’ of what might ‘validly’ have been required in cases where the covenant is deliberately framed in unreasonably wide terms with the object of oppressing, say, an employee, by the fear of expensive litigation. Thus, s 4(1) is qualified by s 4(3) which allows a person subject to a restraint to apply to the court in circumstances where the restraint is against public policy as regards its application to the applicant, ‘by reason of, or partly by reason of, a manifest failure by a person who created or joined in creating the restraint to attempt to make the restraint a reasonable restraint’.248 Once such a failure is established, the court is empowered to order that the restraint be ‘altogether invalid’ as against the applicant. Alternatively, the court may order that the restraint be valid ‘to such extent only (not exceeding the extent to which the restraint is not against public policy) as the court thinks fit’. Regard must be had to the circumstances in which the restraint was created.249 Therefore, if the court finds that the covenant is unreasonable it may, in the exercise of its discretion, refuse to enforce it at all if it is satisfied that there was a ‘manifest failure’ to make the restraint reasonable. [page 633] The onus of proof is on the applicant for relief under s 4(1).250 On the other hand, the onus is on the defendant to establish that the qualification in s 4(3) applies.251
[27-39] Interpretation of the Act. A broad interpretation to the Restraints of Trade Act 1976 (NSW) was given by McLelland J in Orton v Melman,252 where the plaintiffs sought an injunction to restrain the defendant from carrying on the practice of a medical practitioner at either Toronto or Teralba (two suburbs of Lake Macquarie), contrary to cl 24 of a partnership deed between the parties entered into on 1 July 1977. Clause 24 imposed a restraint for a period of three years on an outgoing member of the partnership. It extended to medical practice within a radius of eight miles by road from the two surgeries operated by the partnership, at Toronto and Teralba. There was no doubt that the defendant breached cl 24 by leaving the partnership in June 1980 and practising as a general practitioner at a surgery in Toronto about six months later. But the defendant sought relief under s 4(3) of the Act. McLelland J’s approach to the Act can be summarised as follows. First, the court must decide independently of public policy, whether the restraint has been (or will be) breached by the covenantor. Second, assuming that a breach has been established, the court must decide whether the restraint in its application to that breach, is contrary to public policy. If the restraint does not, in its application to the breach, infringe public policy, it should be enforced unless the defendant successfully makes an application under s 4(3). Applying this approach, McLelland J held that cl 24 had been breached, but that it was not contrary to public policy in its application to the defendant’s breach. It was, in other words, reasonable for an outgoing member of the medical partnership to be subject to a restraint on medical practice in the same suburbs as the practice of the partnership. Therefore, subject to the issues of duration and s 4(3), McLelland J was satisfied that the plaintiffs were entitled to relief. On duration, he concluded that three years was not an unreasonably long period for the breaches which had been established. As to s 4(3), McLelland J considered253 it was a ‘condition precedent of the power of the court to grant relief under this provision that there be found to be “a manifest failure by a person who created or joined in creating the restraint to attempt to make the restraint a reasonable restraint”’. He placed the onus of proof on the applicant, that is, the defendant in this case. However, there was no evidence which justified a conclusion in favour of the defendant. McLelland J’s approach in Orton v Melman has been followed in the subsequent cases.254 However, it is not readily applied to cases where no breach has been established. In that context the court must be able to
[page 634] define a valid restraint within the clause before it can restrain future breaches, and it cannot do so if there is no evidence establishing the limits of a valid restraint. Thus, in ICT Pty Ltd v Sea Containers Ltd,255 the New South Wales Court of Appeal quoted with apparent approval a statement by Needham J in A Buckle & Son Pty Ltd v McAllister:256 Whatever may be the proper interpretation of the (NSW) Restraints of Trade Act 1976, s 4(1) I do not think it empowers the court to create a valid restraint out of an invalid one unless that can be done by a reading down process. 1.
See, eg [25-26].
2.
See further [27-02].
3.
[1961] 1 QB 374 at 388.
4.
See further [27-05].
5.
[1977] 1 All ER 481 at 489. He cited Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 297, 304, 321, 324, 333 in support. See also Stenhouse Australia Ltd v Phillips [1974] AC 391 at 403.
6.
See, eg McFarlane v Daniell (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 337 at 349. But see Buckley v Tutty (1971) 125 CLR 353 at 379–80 where the point was left open by the High Court.
7.
(1984) 156 CLR 532.
8.
(1984) 156 CLR 532 at 557.
9.
[1938] AC 586. Cf Davitt v Titcumb [1989] 3 All ER 417.
10.
Query whether the decriminalisation of suicide implies that the decision would be different today. See Kirkham v Chief Constable of the Greater Manchester Police [1990] 2 QB 283.
11.
(1969) 121 CLR 432 at 458. Cf A v Hayden (1984) 156 CLR 532 at 596.
12.
See, eg [27-21].
13.
See Nelson v Nelson (1995) 184 CLR 538; 132 ALR 133; Fitzgerald v F J Leonhardt Pty Ltd (1997) 189 CLR 215; 143 ALR 569.
14.
Cf Andrews v Parker [1973] Qd R 93 (see [27-12]).
15.
See further [27-21].
16.
The broader suggestion made in some English cases (see Thackwell v Barclays Bank Plc [1986] 1 All ER 676; Saunders v Edwards [1987] 1 WLR 1116; Euro-Diam Ltd v Bathurst [1990] 1 QB 1 at 35; Howard v Shirlstar Container Transport Ltd [1990] 1 WLR 1292) that a ‘conscience test’ should be applied, to permit relief unless success by the plaintiff would be an affront to the public conscience, was disapproved in Tinsley v Milligan [1994] 1 AC 340. Although that case was itself disapproved by the High Court in Nelson v Nelson (1995) 184 CLR 538 at 593, 605–8, 612, the conscience test has not (at least in the terms expressed in the English cases) been adopted in Australia. See generally Andrew Phang, ‘Of Illegality and Presumptions — Australian Departures and Possible Approaches’ (1996) 11 JCL 53.
17.
That is, to achieve substantial ‘restitutio in integrum’. For the meaning of this expression see [18-45],
[31-16]. See further [27-20], [27-27]. 18.
See also [25-14], [25-19].
19.
[1939] AC 277 at 293. See also Farrow Mortgage Services Pty Ltd v Edgar (1993) 114 ALR 1 at 10– 11.
20.
See, eg [27-06].
21.
Such an approach would have helped to avoid the problems to which Hurst v Vestcorp Ltd (1988) 12 NSWLR 394 has given rise. See further [27-27].
22.
See generally [25-07]–[25-15].
23.
See generally [25-19]–[25-33], Chapter 26.
24.
See [25-28].
25.
See generally Chapter 26.
26.
See, eg [27-11].
27.
See [27-11]–[27-20].
28.
See [27-15]–[27-16].
29.
See, eg [27-18].
30.
See generally [27-21]–[27-28].
31.
See generally [27-29]–[27-39].
32.
See [27-03].
33.
(1775) 1 Cowp 341 at 343; 98 ER 1120 at 1121.
34.
See Smith v Jenkins (1970) 119 CLR 397 at 410ff; Gollan v Nugent (1988) 166 CLR 18; 82 ALR 193; Miller v Miller (2011) 242 CLR 446 at 454; 275 ALR 611 at 615; [2011] HCA 9 at [13]. Contrast Hardy v Motor Insurers’ Bureau [1964] 2 QB 745 at 767.
35.
Cf Pitts v Hunt [1991] 1 QB 24.
36.
Scott v Brown Doering McNab & Co [1892] 2 QB 724 at 728, 732; Noble v Maddison (1912) 12 SR (NSW) 435 at 436; Knowles v Fuller (1947) 48 SR (NSW) 243 at 245.
37.
See, eg Chai Sau Yin v Liew Kwee Sam [1962] AC 304 at 311.
38.
See, eg Fire and All Risks Insurance Co Ltd v Powell [1966] VR 513 and generally on the effect of criminality on contractual remedies, John Shand, ‘Unblinkering the Unruly Horse: Public Policy in the Law of Contract’ [1972A] CLJ 144.
39.
See, eg T P Rich Investments Pty Ltd v Calderon [1964] NSWR 709 at 716; North v Marra Developments Ltd (1981) 148 CLR 42 at 60; 37 ALR 341.
40.
[1964] 2 QB 745. See also Charlton v Fisher [2002] QB 578.
41.
No point of privity of contract (see generally Chapter 16) was taken by the Motor Insurers’ Bureau, and to do so would have been contrary to its agreement with the Ministry of Transport.
42.
See, eg Wild v Simpson [1919] 2 KB 544. Cf North v Marra Developments Ltd (1981) 148 CLR 42; 37 ALR 341.
43.
See, eg Dressy Frocks Pty Ltd v Bock (1951) 51 SR (NSW) 390.
44.
For independent claims in tort see [27-21]–[27-24]. For restitutionary claims see [27-07], [2727]–[27-28].
45.
(1915) 15 SR (NSW) 337. See also Bradshaw v Gilbert’s (Australasian) Agency (Vic) Pty Ltd (1952)
86 CLR 209 (see [25-13]). 46.
(1962) 108 CLR 391 (see further [27-23], [27-24]).
47.
(1997) 189 CLR 215 at 220.
48.
(1890) 24 QBD 742.
49.
(1890) 24 QBD 742 at 745.
50.
See further [27-27]–[27-28].
51.
(1878) 4 VLR (E) 68. See also Taylor v Chester (1869) LR 4 QB 309 (see [27-24]).
52.
See generally Chapter 39.
53.
See generally Chapter 40.
54.
See, eg Chapman v Wade [1939] SASR 298 at 302–4.
55.
See [26-01]–[26-20].
56.
See, eg DJE Constructions Pty Ltd v Maddocks [1982] 1 NSWLR 5; and see generally on rectification [21-01]–[21-11].
57.
See, eg Noble v Maddison (1912) 12 SR (NSW) 435.
58.
See generally on estoppel Chapter 7, [31-08]–[31-10].
59.
(1775) 1 Cowp 341; 98 ER 1120.
60.
(1775) 1 Cowp 341 at 343; 98 ER 1120 at 1121.
61.
[1921] 2 KB 716 at 729, 732. See also Day Ford Pty Ltd v Sciacca [1990] 2 Qd R 209 at 216.
62.
The court did not consider whether any damages would have been available against the buyer for deceit; but see [27-13].
63.
(1948) 76 CLR 547 at 558.
64.
See [25-33].
65.
See, eg Re Mahmoud and Ispahani [1921] 2 KB 716 (see [25-11], [27-09]); Thackwell v Barclays Bank Plc [1986] 1 All ER 676.
66.
(1775) 1 Cowp 341 at 343; 98 ER 1120 at 1121. See also Smith v Bromley (1760) 2 Doug 696n at 697; 99 ER 441 at 443.
67.
(1995) 184 CLR 538 at 613.
68.
Cf Fitzgerald v F J Leonhardt Pty Ltd (1997) 189 CLR 215 at 229–30, 249–50.
69.
See [27-11]–[27-14].
70.
See [27-15]–[27-18].
71.
See [27-19].
72.
See [27-20]. Cf [27-25].
73.
See J K Grodecki, ‘In Pari Delicto Potior Est Conditio Defendentis’ (1955) 71 LQR 254.
74.
[1961] 1 QB 374 (see [25-13]).
75.
See, eg [25-10].
76.
See, eg Kearley v Thomson (1890) 24 QBD 742 at 745–6; George v Greater Adelaide Land Development Co Ltd (1929) 43 CLR 91 at 99, 101; Re Ferguson (1969) 14 FLR 311 at 316. See generally on duress Chapter 22.
77.
See, eg Callaghan v O’Sullivan [1925] VLR 664 (exception not applicable where contract to stifle prosecution (see [25-28]) entered into as a result of oppression). But cf Clegg v Wilson (1932) 32 SR (NSW) 109 (see [27-18]).
78.
[1973] Qd R 93.
79.
See [25-32].
80.
See Jones v Bouffier (1911) 12 CLR 579 at 621.
81.
See, eg Nicholls v Stanton (1915) 15 SR (NSW) 337; George v Greater Adelaide Land Development Co Ltd (1929) 43 CLR 91 at 101. Cf Radford v Ferguson (1947) 50 WALR 14 (money paid to unregistered builder for building of house held recoverable where he had fraudulently misrepresented that he was registered).
82.
See Mason Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 2637.
83.
(1953) 53 SR (NSW) 285. See also Quin v Mutual Acceptance Co Ltd [1968] 1 NSWR 122.
84.
(1953) 53 SR (NSW) 285 at 288–9.
85.
See, eg Harse v Pearl Life Assurance Co [1904] 1 KB 558 at 563; George v Greater Adelaide Land Development Co Ltd (1929) 43 CLR 91 at 101.
86.
(1969) 14 FLR 311 at 317. See also Sykes v Stratton [1972] 1 NSWLR 145 at 163–4.
87.
See also Abdurahman v Field (1987) 8 NSWLR 158; Weston v Beaufils (1994) 122 ALR 240.
88.
See J Beatson, ‘Repudiation of Illegal Purpose as a Ground for Restitution’ (1975) 91 LQR 313; Robert Merkin, ‘Restitution by Withdrawal from Executory Illegal Contracts’ (1981) 97 LQR 420.
89.
(1908) 6 CLR 208. Cf Symes v Hughes (1870) LR 9 Eq 475. See also Perpetual Executors and Trustees Association of Australia Ltd v Wright (1917) 23 CLR 185; Donaldson v Freeson (1934) 51 CLR 598.
90.
See, eg Payne v McDonald (1908) 6 CLR 208 at 212, 213.
91.
See [27-18].
92.
[1936] 1 KB 169 (see [25-22]). See also Bigos v Bousted [1951] 1 All ER 92; Euro-Diam Ltd v Bathurst [1990] 1 QB 1 at 35–6.
93.
(1932) 32 SR (NSW) 109 at 125.
94.
(1932) 32 SR (NSW) 109 at 125.
95.
(1929) 43 CLR 91 at 100, 101.
96.
[1904] 1 KB 558.
97.
(1890) 24 QBD 742 at 746.
98.
(1876) 1 QBD 291 at 300; cf at 295.
99.
See Marks v Jolly (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 351 at 358, and further [27-18].
100. The facts were stated in [27-07]. 101. See Hermann v Charlesworth [1905] 2 KB 123 at 134–5; Bigos v Bousted [1951] 1 All ER 92 at 97– 8. 102. (1932) 32 SR (NSW) 109 at 125. 103. See, eg Hermann v Charlesworth [1905] 2 KB 123. Cf Taylor v Bowers (1876) 1 QBD 291. And see Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 2634.
104. (1929) 43 CLR 91 at 100–1. See also Clegg v Wilson (1932) 32 SR (NSW) 109 at 122–4. 105. See, eg Kearley v Thomson (1890) 24 QBD 742; Chettiar v Chettiar [1962] AC 294. 106. (1929) 43 CLR 91 (see [27-07]). 107. (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 351. 108. (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 351 at 358. 109. (1932) 32 SR (NSW) 109. 110. See [25-28]. 111. See Berg v Sadler [1937] 2 KB 158. Cf Sykes v Stratton [1972] 1 NSWLR 145. 112. [1996] Ch 107 at 135 (see Graham Virgo [1996] CLJ 23; Peter Creighton (1997) 60 MLR 102). 113. [1966] 1 NSWR 348. 114. [1966] 1 NSWR 348 at 351. 115. [1966] 1 NSWR 348 at 352. 116. (1997) 189 CLR 215 at 231 per McHugh and Gummow JJ. See also Nelson v Nelson (1995) 184 CLR 538 at 562–7, 617. 117. See, eg Kearley v Thomson (1890) 24 QBD 742 at 746; South Australian Cold Stores Ltd v Electricity Trust of South Australia (1965) 115 CLR 247 at 256, 257–8, 263; Re Ferguson (1969) 14 FLR 311 at 316–17. 118. See Smith v Bromley (1760) 2 Doug 696n at 697; 99 ER 441 at 443. 119. (1778) 2 Cowp 790 at 792; 98 ER 1364 at 1364. 120. (1965) 115 CLR 247. 121. Re Cavalier Insurance Co Ltd [1989] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 430. 122. The extent to which a plaintiff, entitled to relief under this exception, must make restitution is uncertain. See Mayfair Trading Co Pty Ltd v Dreyer (1958) 101 CLR 428 at 451ff; Farrow Mortgage Services Pty Ltd v Edgar (1993) 114 ALR 1 at 19 and the discussion in Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 2639. 123. [1960] AC 192. 124. See further [27-27]–[27-28] and generally Chapter 38. 125. See Brian Coote, ‘Another Look at Bowmakers v Barnet Instruments’ (1972) 35 MLR 38; Andrew Stewart, ‘Contractual Illegality and the Recognition of Proprietary Interests’ (1988) 1 JCL 134. See also Nelson Enonchong, ‘Title Claims and Illegal Transactions’ (1995) 111 LQR 135. 126. [1945] 1 KB 65. 127. See further [27-23]. 128. [1945] 1 KB 65 at 70–1. 129. See Thomas Brown & Sons Ltd v Fazal Deen (1962) 108 CLR 391; Gollan v Nugent (1988) 166 CLR 18. Contrast Nelson v Nelson (1995) 184 CLR 538 at 557, 592–3. 130. (1988) 166 CLR 18 at 38, 49. 131. See [31-01]. 132. (1945) 46 SR (NSW) 16 at 19. 133. (1950) 50 SR (NSW) 237 (see [27-23]).
134. (1954) 91 CLR 452 at 483. See also Ayerst v Jenkins (1873) LR 16 Eq 275 (gift); Alexander v Rayson [1936] 1 KB 169 at 186 (lease); Ison v Australian Wheat Board (1967) 68 SR (NSW) 102 (sale). But see M J Higgins, ‘The Transfer of Property Under Illegal Transactions’ (1962) 25 MLR 149. 135. That is not to say that the principle is inapplicable to land (see Chettiar v Chettiar [1962] AC 294; McKenna v Perecich [1973] WAR 56; Munro v Morrison [1980] VR 83 (see J C Phillips (1981) 55 ALJ 292)). However, given the disapproval of Tinsley v Milligan [1994] 1 AC 340 in Nelson v Nelson (1995) 184 CLR 538, it will rarely apply. 136. See [27-22]–[27-24]. 137. See, eg Penfolds Wines Pty Ltd v Elliott (1946) 74 CLR 204 at 226. 138. [1960] AC 167. 139. See further [27-24]. 140. (1946) 74 CLR 204 at 229. 141. [1945] 1 KB 65 (see [27-21]). 142. (1962) 108 CLR 391. 143. See [27-24]. 144. (1950) 50 SR (NSW) 237. 145. [1960] AC 167 (see [27-22]). 146. See Gollan v Nugent (1988) 166 CLR 18. 147. See, eg Fifoot, History and Sources of the Common Law, 1949, pp 24–34. 148. [1960] AC 167 (see [27-22]). See also Taylor v Bowers (1876) 1 QBD 291. 149. Gollan v Nugent (1988) 166 CLR 18. 150. (1869) LR 4 QB 309. 151. See Gollan v Nugent (1988) 166 CLR 18 at 30. 152. (1962) 108 CLR 391 (see [27-23]). 153. (1967) 68 SR (NSW) 102. 154. See generally [10-11]–[10-14]. 155. [1955] 2 QB 525. See also Quin v Mutual Acceptance Co Ltd [1968] 1 NSWR 122. Cf Brownett v Newton (1941) 64 CLR 439. 156. See Brice Dickson, ‘Restitution and Illegal Transactions’, in Burrows, ed, Essays on the Law of Restitution, 1991, p 171; Aleco Vrisakis and J W Carter, ‘Restitution of Payments Made Under Contracts Prohibited by Statute’ (2000) 15 JCL 228. 157. See generally Chapter 38. 158. See generally Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, ch 26. 159. (1929) 43 CLR 91 (see [25-10]). 160. Applying Harse v Pearl Life Assurance Co [1904] 1 KB 558 (non-recoverability of premiums paid under illegal insurance policy). See also Cheers v Pacific Acceptance Corp Ltd (1959) 60 SR (NSW) 1. 161. See [27-11]–[27-18]. 162. (1997) 189 CLR 215 at 231.
163. See [38-06], [38-18], [38-21]. 164. See [38-07]. 165. (1925) 42 WN (NSW) 183. 166. See, eg Kiriri Cotton Co Ltd v Dewani [1960] AC 192 (see [27-20]). 167. See, eg George v Greater Adelaide Land Development Co Ltd (1929) 43 CLR 91 (see [27-27]). 168. [1919] 2 KB 544 at 565. 169. See [25-30]. 170. See Re Trepca Mines Ltd (No 2) [1962] Ch 511 (see [25-30]); Awwad v Geraghty (a firm) [2001] QB 570 at 596. Cf Mohamed v Alaga & Co (a firm) [2000] 1 WLR 1815. 171. See, eg Newton v Brownett (1940) 41 SR (NSW) 1 (quantum valebat) (affirmed without reference to the point sub nom Brownett v Newton (1941) 64 CLR 439); Re Central Queensland Leather Industries Ltd [1969] QWN 26; Williamson v Diab [1988] 1 Qd R 210. For the position where the contract is merely void see [38-18]. 172. See Newton v Brownett (1940) 41 SR (NSW) 1 at 6 (affirmed without reference to the point sub nom Brownett v Newton (1941) 64 CLR 439). 173. See [38-07]. 174. See [27-27]. 175. (1988) 12 NSWLR 394 at 445–6. Kirby P agreed. 176. (1997) 189 CLR 215 at 231 (see [27-27]). 177. Thus, because the parties were not equally at fault in Hatcher v White (1953) 53 SR (NSW) 285 (see [27-13]), the claim for work done and materials supplied ought to have succeeded. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 2637. 178. (1929) 43 CLR 91 (see [27-16], [27-27]). 179. (2012) 286 ALR 12 at 26; [2012] HCA 7 at [34]. 180. (2012) 286 ALR 12 at 30; [2012] HCA 7 at [45]. See also (2012) 286 ALR 12 at 47; [2012] HCA 7 at [111]. 181. See R E McGarvie, ‘Illegality and Severability in Contracts’ (1977) 13 UWALR 1. For the history see N S Marsh, ‘The Severance of Illegality in Contract’ (1948) 64 LQR 230 and 347. 182. The word is used generally to include promise and covenant. 183. See McFarlane v Daniell (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 337 at 344. 184. See [27-34]–[27-39]. 185. See [27-32]–[27-33]. 186. See [4-15]. 187. (1956) 95 CLR 420. 188. (1969) 121 CLR 432 at 442. 189. See, eg O’Loughlin v O’Loughlin [1958] VR 649 at 652; Carney v Herbert [1985] AC 301 at 309–10. And see Sydney City Council v Ilenace Pty Ltd [1984] 3 NSWLR 414 at 422 per Samuels JA (tests ‘various and difficult to reconcile’). 190. See Amoco Australia Pty Ltd v Rocca Bros Motor Engineering Co Pty Ltd [No 2] [1975] AC 561 at 578; 133 CLR 331; 5 ALR 65.
191. Cf Brew v Whitlock (No 2) [1967] VR 803 at 806, where the court could see no distinction between the test applicable in cases of uncertainty and cases of illegality. 192. (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 337. 193. (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 337 at 345. 194. See, eg Thomas Brown & Sons Ltd v Fazal Deen (1962) 108 CLR 391 at 411. 195. (1969) 121 CLR 432 at 438. 196. Humphries v Proprietors ‘Surfers Palms North’ Group Titles Plan 1955 (1994) 179 CLR 597 at 619; 121 ALR 1. 197. [1985] AC 301 at 311. 198. See [27-38]–[27-39]. 199. See [27-30]. 200. See further [27-37]. 201. (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 337 at 346. 202. See, eg Attwood v Lamont [1920] 3 KB 571. This reflects the distinction drawn in [26-15]. 203. Brooks v Burns Philp Trustee Co Ltd (1969) 121 CLR 432 at 442, and see [27-36]. 204. For the distinction between simple contracts and deeds see [6-12]. 205. [1964] NSWR 638 at 646. Contrast Australian Breeders Co-operative Society Ltd v Jones (1997) 150 ALR 488. 206. (1912) 12 SR (NSW) 435. 207. See [25-24]. 208. Cf Subdivisions Ltd v Payne [1934] SASR 214. 209. (1973) 133 CLR 288; 1 ALR 385 (see [26-19]). 210. [1975] AC 561. 211. But cf Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 299. 212. [1975] AC 561 at 580. Contrast Alec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil (Great Britain) Ltd [1985] 1 WLR 173. 213. See, eg Esso Petroleum Co Ltd v Harper’s Garage (Stourport) Ltd [1968] AC 269 at 295. 214. (1950) 83 CLR 628 (see [26-16]). 215. (1950) 83 CLR 628 at 659. 216. [1913] AC 724 at 745. 217. See, eg Nordenfelt v Maxim Nordenfelt Guns and Ammunition Co Ltd [1894] AC 535. 218. [1920] 3 KB 571. 219. [1920] 3 KB 571 at 580. 220. [1920] 3 KB 571 at 593. 221. See generally [28-05]–[28-08]. 222. (1969) 121 CLR 432 (see [25-27]). 223. Contrast Stenhouse Australia Ltd v Phillips [1974] AC 391. 224. See (1969) 121 CLR 432 at 438.
225. (1969) 121 CLR 432 at 464. Owen J expressed (at 479) the same conclusion, whereas Menzies J expressed no opinion. 226. [1985] 1 WLR 173. See also Marshall v NM Financial Management Ltd [1997] 1 WLR 1527 at 1532. 227. (1969) 121 CLR 432 at 463. And see [6-25]; but cf [26-11]. 228. See O’Loughlin v O’Loughlin [1958] VR 649. Cf Howard F Hudson Pty Ltd v Ronayne (1972) 126 CLR 449. Contrast Re Field and the Conveyancing Act [1968] 1 NSWR 210 at 216–17. 229. (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 337 at 346. 230. [1982] 1 NSWLR 5. See also Electric Acceptance Pty Ltd v Doug Thorley Caravans (Aust) Pty Ltd [1981] VR 799 at 812. 231. [1982] 1 NSWLR 5 at 10. 232. (1962) 108 CLR 391. 233. See [27-06], [27-23]. 234. See (1962) 108 CLR 391 at 411. 235. [1981] VR 799 at 818. 236. [1985] AC 301 (see Jennifer Hill and J W Carter, ‘Severance, Illegal Contracts and Company Law’ (1986) 4 Companies and Securities Law Journal 183). Contrast Hurst v Vestcorp Ltd (1988) 12 NSWLR 394. 237. See also Hurst v Vestcorp Ltd (1988) 12 NSWLR 394; Australian Breeders Co-operative Society Ltd v Jones (1997) 150 ALR 488. 238. [1985] AC 301 at 317. See also South Western Mineral Water Co Ltd v Ashmore [1967] 1 WLR 1110. 239. For severance where the contract is affected by the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) (see [26-21]–[26-23]) see, eg SST Consulting Services Pty Ltd v Rieson (2006) 225 CLR 516; 228 ALR 417; [2006] HCA 31. 240. See s 3(1). The Act applies notwithstanding any stipulation to the contrary: s 3(2); but does not affect the operation of enactments set out in s 3(3). For the policy perspective see Wright v Gasweld Pty Ltd (1991) 22 NSWLR 317 at 337. 241. See generally [26-01]–[26-20]. 242. LRC 9, 1970. 243. See [26-16]. 244. See [26-03]. 245. See [27-29]–[27-37]. 246. This does not affect the invalidity of a restraint of trade by reason of any matter other than public policy: s 4(2). See Austra Tanks Pty Ltd v Running [1982] 2 NSWLR 840 (uncertainty). 247. [1913] AC 724 at 745. See also K A & C Smith Pty Ltd v Ward (1998) 45 NSWLR 702 at 728. 248. Where, under the rules of an association, a person who is a member of the association is subject to the restraint, the association is deemed to have created or joined in creating the restraint: s 4(4). 249. The order has effect from such date, not being earlier than the day on which the order is made, as is specified in the order. The order does not affect any right (including any right to damages) which accrued before the day on which the order takes effect: s 4(5). 250. ICT Pty Ltd v Sea Containers Ltd (1995) 39 NSWLR 640.
251. Orton v Melman [1981] 1 NSWLR 583. 252. [1981] 1 NSWLR 583. 253. [1981] 1 NSWLR 583 at 589. 254. See, eg IRAF Pty Ltd v Grahams [1982] 1 NSWLR 419; Fleming Bros (Monaro Agencies) Pty Ltd v Smith (1983) ATPR ¶40-389; Knogo Corp v Halligan (1984) ATPR ¶40-460. 255. (1995) 39 NSWLR 640 at 674. 256. (1986) 4 NSWLR 426 at 434. See also Wright v Gasweld Pty Ltd (1991) 22 NSWLR 317 at 329.
[page 635]
PART VII
Performance and Breach
[page 637]
Chapter 28
Performance of the Contract [28-01] Issues. In McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission,1 Dixon and Fullagar JJ described as a ‘fundamental question’ of contract law, the question ‘What did the promisor really promise?’. This has two aspects. The first is the scope of the promisor’s promise. It may be expressed in terms: in what circumstances will a promisor be obliged to perform? Approached from the perspective of the law on performance,2 the concern is with three main issues:3 the time and order of performance required by the contract; the performance which must be rendered in order to discharge the parties; and the performance which each party must render in order to be entitled to enforce the obligations of the other. The second aspect relates to the standard of care which a promisor must exercise when performing its promises. Failure to perform a promise in accordance with the applicable standard of care is a breach of contract.4 Although both aspects of the question depend on the construction of the contract, the courts have developed and applied rules to govern them. These rules are in the nature of ‘default rules’, that is, rules which apply where the parties have not expressed an intention on the matter. In practice they take the form of presumptions about the parties’ intention.
Time and Order of Performance [28-02] Issues of construction. The time and order of performance under a contract are decided by reference to the intention of the parties as expressed in the contract. Intention is an issue of construction.5 Assuming that the contract is in writing, these are issues of law not fact.6
[page 638]
Time of Performance [28-03] Express provision. The parties may expressly provide for the time at which their obligations are to be performed. Thus, the time of performance may be fixed by a term (‘time stipulation’) by reference to a specified date or time period. Alternatively, time may be fixed by reference to an event, such as the arrival of goods the subject of a contract of sale at the buyer’s place of business. However, the event need not be an element of either party’s performance. For example, the commission payable to an agent under an agency contract may become due when payment is received by the principal under a contract entered into with a third party. [28-04] Performance within a reasonable time. Generally, where a contract does not specify the time of performance, the obligation in question must be performed within a ‘reasonable’ time.7 What constitutes a reasonable time is a question of fact to be determined at the time when performance is alleged to be due rather than at the moment of contractual formation.8 For example, where a contract for the sale of goods states no time for delivery, a reasonable time expires when, in the actual circumstances, the seller has had sufficient time to make delivery. Because the period is not to be regarded as fixed at the moment the contract is agreed, matters such as the nature of the goods, weather conditions, and so on may be relevant.
Order of Performance [28-05] Relation between obligations. Unless the parties, in fixing the time of performance, have also expressly agreed on the order in which they are to perform, the order of performance depends on the relation between the parties’ obligations. The question is whether one party’s obligation to perform is dependent on or independent of the other party’s obligation to perform.9 This depends on the intention of the parties, and is therefore decided by construing the contract.10 [28-06] Independent obligations. Where the parties’ obligations are independent of one another the order of performance is immaterial. Thus, if A’s
obligation to perform is independent of performance by B, B may call upon A to perform without first performing. If the contract does not specify the time of performance, A must perform within a reasonable time, but if the contract specifies a time for performance it is sufficient that that time [page 639] has arrived: A cannot refuse to perform on the ground that B has not performed. Originally, obligations were treated as independent in the absence of words linking the parties’ obligations. For example, in the absence of a provision stating that a buyer of goods was to pay for the goods, the buyer’s obligation was construed as independent of performance by the seller.11 Even the use of a linking word might not rebut the presumption of independency if a time for performance was named. Thus, in the famous case of Pordage v Cole12 a purchaser’s promise to pay for land ‘before Midsummer’ was construed as independent in character. Therefore, the vendor could recover the price of the land by an action commenced after Midsummer even though he had not transferred title to the land. The rationale for construing promises as independent was that, in the absence of clear words to the contrary, the court would presume that each party had bargained for the other party’s promise, rather than the performance of the promise. This meant that if either party failed to perform the other would have a remedy, in damages, on the promise. But reliance could not be placed on the other party’s failure to perform as a ground for not performing. However, towards the end of the 18th century the courts took a more practical approach and were less willing to apply a presumption of independency. Accordingly, the existence of a relation of independency of obligation was said to depend on the ‘good sense of the case’13 and not on ‘any formal arrangement of the words’.14 The more practical approach prevailed, with the result that, today, the presumption is that obligations are dependent in character.15 Nevertheless, even today an independent relationship between promises may be found. Thus, there is a present day reminder of the decision in Pordage v Cole in a provision of the sale of goods legislation which permits a seller to recover the price of goods without making delivery if the buyer’s promise is to pay for the goods on a day certain irrespective of delivery.16
[28-07] Dependent obligations. Where a contract between A and B makes A’s obligation to perform dependent on B’s performance, B must perform first unless it has been agreed that the parties are to perform at the same time.17 For example, under a lump sum employment contract the employee must perform first because the courts now apply a presumption of dependency of obligation between the employer’s obligation to pay wages and the employee’s obligation to work.18 [page 640] Where dependency of obligation exists, one party’s obligation to perform is dependent on the occurrence of an event termed a ‘condition precedent’. Thus, if a party’s obligation to perform is dependent on prior performance by the other party, full performance by that party is fulfilment of the condition precedent.19 In theory this means that the first party’s performance obligation cannot be enforced unless and until the other party has fully performed. However, in practice the condition precedent may be treated as fulfilled by substantial performance.20 A ‘condition precedent’ is a contingency which must be fulfilled before performance of a dependent obligation can be called for, rather than a term of the contract. Nevertheless, it has been common practice to refer to conditions precedent as terms.21 [28-08] Concurrent performance. Towards the end of the 18th century it was established that in contracts for the sale of land or goods which contemplate concurrent performance, the parties’ obligations are dependent in character.22 However, dependency in this context does not refer to actual performance. Rather, it refers to the obligation of the parties to be ready and willing to perform.23 Thus, the sale of goods legislation states that the seller must be ready and willing ‘to give possession of the goods in exchange for the price’, and that the buyer must be ready and willing ‘to pay the price in exchange for possession’.24 In the absence of agreement to the contrary, a sale of goods contract will be taken to require concurrent performance. Thus, payment of the price (and acceptance of the goods) takes place, normally, at the time of delivery. Accordingly, the rule stated in the legislation refers to ‘concurrent’ obligations of delivery and payment.25 Although the concept of dependency of obligation in
cases of concurrent performance is expressed in terms of readiness and willingness to perform, this does not mean that a buyer of goods can be held liable to pay their price merely because the seller was ready and willing to deliver. Except in the situation referred to above,26 the seller must rely on performance, that is, the transfer of ownership.27 The [page 641] same is true in sale of land transactions, where the vendor’s right to the price depends on conveyance of title.28 [28-09] Co-operation and good faith in performance. In many contracts the ability of one party to perform will depend on the cooperation of the other. An express term requiring co-operation may be present.29 If there is no such term, the duty may be inferred from the nature of the parties’ performance obligations, as where the contract requires concurrent performance.30 Similarly, in a contract of employment the ability of the employee to perform depends on co-operation by the employer, for example, in allowing access to the place of employment. Such situations are obvious examples that construing a contract may indicate the presence of a duty to co-operate. As was said by Lord Blackburn in Mackay v Dick:31 [Where] it appears that both parties have agreed that something shall be done, which cannot effectually be done unless both concur in doing it, the construction of the contract is that each agrees to do all that is necessary to be done on his part for the carrying out of that thing, though there may be no express words to that effect. What is the part of each must depend on [the] circumstances.
In other situations, the requirement of co-operation may be established by the implication of terms. Thus, in Secured Income Real Estate (Australia) Ltd v St Martins Investments Pty Ltd32 Mason J approved the following statement by Griffith CJ in Butt v M’Donald:33 It is a general rule applicable to every contract that each party agrees, by implication, to do all such things as are necessary on his part to enable the other party to have the benefit of the contract.
The term may require active co-operation, or create an obligation not to prevent the other party performing the contract.34 For example, in Fitzgerald v F J Leonhardt Pty Ltd35 a land owner was subject to an implied obligation to obtain a licence for the drilling of a bore. Failure to co-operate will in these cases be a breach of contract.36 Further consequences depend on the precise circumstances of the case. There are several possibilities.
First, where co-operation is essential to performance, a promisor who does not perform because of the other party’s failure to co-operate will have a valid excuse for not performing. [page 642] Second, sometimes the promisor can be treated as having fully performed. Thus, in Mackay v Dick the plaintiff, who sued to recover the price of a digging machine, was met by the defence that the machine had not passed performance tests required by the contract. Because the machine had not been properly tested due to the failure of the defendant to co-operate, the House of Lords treated the requirements of the contract as having been fulfilled. The plaintiff was then entitled to recover the price of the machine without proving that it would have performed satisfactorily had it been properly tested. In such a case the doctrinal basis appears to be estoppel:37 the defendant was, by his conduct, estopped from relying on the term in question as a defence to the action. But if the term is not solely for the benefit of the party who has failed to co-operate, the failure to cooperate will not be treated as equivalent to performance.38 This leads to a third possibility. Unless co-operation may be compelled by an order for specific performance,39 as where the court orders a purchaser to sign a document required for performance of a contract for the sale of land, the plaintiff will generally be restricted to a claim for compensation. For example, where a buyer under an FOB contract of sale fails to co-operate with the seller by refusing to name an effective ship to carry the goods, the buyer will not be liable to pay the price. The buyer’s failure provides the seller with a defence to any action for breach, and also with a cause of action in damages, but the court cannot treat the buyer as liable to pay the price unless title to the goods has been received.40 This shows that Mackay v Dick was a rather special case. The defendant’s failure to co-operate there led to liability to pay a liquidated sum (the purchase price) on the basis that ownership of the goods had already passed to the buyer.41 The willingness of Australian courts to imply a duty of co-operation signifies that in many cases each party will be required to act in good faith towards the other.42 However, a duty to act in good faith is more general than a requirement of co-operation, and is not a general incident of contracts. Under §205 of the Restatement (Second) Contracts (1979) every contract is regarded as including a
duty of good faith and fair dealing in performance. In Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp43 Dawson J referred without disapproval to the finding of the trial judge in that case that the contract contained a good faith obligation to the same effect. However, notwithstanding the many situations in which the good faith duty will be implied,44 this will not always be the case.45 Where the duty is implied, the consequences of breach will depend on the circumstances. Thus, the breach may disentitle a party to rely on a term of [page 643] the contract,46 prevent the exercise of a particular right against the other party,47 or give rise to a liability in damages.48 A requirement to act in good faith must not be confused with the more onerous duty which is owed by a fiduciary. A person who occupies a fiduciary position is not merely required to act honestly or reasonably: there is a positive duty to act in the other’s interests. Sometimes (but not usually) a contracting party will occupy a fiduciary position. For example, under a contract of partnership the partners owe fiduciary duties to one another. And the fact that a contract includes a fiduciary duty does not mean that every breach of contract will also be a breach of fiduciary duty.49 [28-10] Prevention of performance. Even if the contract does not involve active co-operation between the parties, one party’s ability to perform may depend on the other not preventing that performance. In such cases the court may be prepared to imply a term in accordance with the principle stated by Cockburn CJ in Stirling v Maitland:50 [I]f a party enters into an arrangement which can only take effect by the continuance of a certain existing state of circumstances, there is an implied engagement on his part that he shall do nothing of his own motion to put an end to that state of circumstances, under which alone the arrangement can be operative.
Thus, where a contract between A and B requires A to perform first, A will usually have an excuse for not performing if B has prevented A from performing. As in the case of a failure to co-operate,51 there may be additional consequences. If the act of prevention is a breach of contract it will give rise to a liability in damages, and may also amount to a repudiation of the contract.52 In some of the older cases there was a tendency to treat prevention as equal to performance.53 Although this is still the case in some situations, for
[page 644] example, where the conduct in question prevents the fulfilment of a contingency which was to operate for the benefit of the party who prevented performance,54 usually the party whose performance has been prevented will simply have a claim for damages for breach of contract. For example, where an employer prevents an employee from performing an employment contract, the employee will be entitled to recover damages for breach but not the wages which the employer agreed to pay for services rendered.55 [28-11] Plea of performance implied. Under modern Supreme Court pleading rules56 a plaintiff (or defendant) need not expressly plead that conditions precedent have been fulfilled, since this will be implied under rules of court.57 This can be contrasted with the position which formerly obtained and is important when considering the older cases on dependent and independent promises. For example, at the time when Pordage v Cole58 was decided, a party seeking to enforce the other party’s obligations had specifically to plead fulfilment of any condition precedent on which the obligation of that party to perform depended. It follows that a party who claims that the other has not performed must in the pleadings put performance in issue in order to oblige the other party to provide evidence of performance.59 Similarly, if a plaintiff (or defendant) relies on some excuse for a failure to perform, such as a prevention of performance, this should be stated. If it is claimed that a breach of contract has occurred this must be alleged and, if disputed, proved.60
Discharge by Performance General [28-12] Performance must be exact. For a party to be discharged by performance the performance must correspond exactly to the requirements of the contract. However, minute failures and insignificant defects in performance will be excused.61 Where both parties have fully performed their contractual obligations, the
contract is discharged by performance. [page 645] [28-13] Discharge by substantial performance. The rule stated above will be excluded if the parties have expressed an intention that a performance which is not exact is nevertheless to discharge a party. Sometimes this can be implied from the nature of the obligations. For example, in Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd62 an advertising contract required the contractors to display advertisements for ‘at least eight hours per day’. The High Court interpreted this as requiring display for ‘substantially’ eight hours. Usually, however, the courts will not accept the argument that obligations in commercial contracts are discharged by substantial performance.63
Method of Performance [28-14] Demand of performance. As a general rule, once performance is due there is no requirement that the promisee demand performance from the promisor, and so a promisor (debtor) must pay a debt due under the contract even though the promisee (creditor) has made no demand for payment.64 The parties may reach a contrary agreement, by providing that performance is not to become due until demanded, and there are also statutory exceptions to the general rule.65 If performance — such as the payment of a debt — is due ‘on demand’ the debtor is entitled to a reasonable period of time to comply with the demand.66 In cases where the contract requires a demand for performance to be made, a repudiation by the promisor may eliminate the requirement, and in such cases an action may be brought by the promisee without any prior demand.67 Whether or not a demand is required, performance cannot be demanded prior to the time specified by the contract. Similarly, under Australian law, a promisee is not usually entitled to an assurance from the promisor that he or she will perform when the time for performance arrives, even if there are reasons for doubting the promisor’s ability to perform.68 [28-15] Tender of performance. The promisor must tender performance, that is, offer it to the promisee, within the time required by the contract unless the promisee has dispensed with the requirement. The dispensation may be express
or implied. A request not to perform is an example of the former69 and a repudiation of obligation may be treated as an implied dispensation.70 Thus, if a buyer has intimated that performance [page 646] will not be accepted, the seller is absolved from the requirement of making what would be a formal tender,71 but is not entitled to recover the price of the goods.72 A promisee is not obliged to accept an early tender. However, since the promisor has until the expiry of the time specified by the contract to tender performance, the fact that a bad tender is made prior to the expiry of the time for performance, for example, of goods which do not conform with the contract, does not prevent a fresh tender being made of goods which do conform.73 The promisee (buyer) must accept such a tender unless the first tender was a repudiation of obligation which has been accepted as an anticipatory breach. For example, if a seller tenders unsuitable goods, and also states that no other goods are available for delivery, the buyer may be entitled to treat the statement as a repudiation of obligation. The sale of goods legislation provides that a demand or tender of goods must be made at a reasonable hour; and that what constitutes a reasonable hour is a question of fact.74 These rules appear to be of general application. In the case of a tender of money, the tender must be a legal tender, that is, of notes or coin issued by the Reserve Bank75 of the correct amount and in accordance with the requirements of s 16 of the Currency Act 1965 (Cth). The effect of a refusal to accept a valid tender may depend on the nature of the contract. If A owes money to B under a contract and B refuses to accept a legal tender, A is not discharged from the obligation to pay the debt. If B brings an action to recover the money due, A should pay the debt into court so as to avoid being held liable to pay the costs of the proceedings. On the other hand, where a seller tenders goods to a buyer, and the buyer rejects the tender, and without justification refuses to accept delivery, the seller is entitled to bring an action for damages — for non-acceptance — and is not liable in respect of the failure to deliver.76 Usually, however, the buyer is not obliged to pay the price of the goods unless property passed to the buyer under the contract.77 Moreover, even if property did pass, if the seller has exercised the statutory right of resale the seller’s right will be to recover only damages.78
[28-16] Payment. Where a contract requires payment in cash, the promisee (creditor) is not bound to accept a negotiable instrument, such as [page 647] the promisor’s (debtor’s) personal cheque, since this is not payment in cash.79 It is, however, extremely common for a creditor to accept a bill of exchange as payment. Where this occurs the consequences depend on the intention of the parties. There are two possibilities: the cheque may be accepted as conditional payment; or as a discharge of the debtor’s obligations.80 In the former case the debtor will be discharged only if the bill is honoured on presentation, and, if it is not, the creditor has the choice of suing on the original contract or on the separate contract evidenced by the bill. On the other hand, if the intention was for the debtor to be treated as discharged under the contract, the creditor is restricted to an action on the bill of exchange. In the absence of indications to the contrary, payment will be presumed to be conditional on the bill of exchange being met.81 Where the contract expressly provides that payment need not be made in cash, or may be made alternatively in cash or some other form, the problem discussed above also arises. For example, if a contract for the sale of goods provides for payment by ‘banker’s confirmed credit’, the fact that a credit has been opened in favour of the seller does not necessarily mean that the buyer has discharged the obligation to pay. This may be the intention of the parties, but usually the credit is to be taken as a conditional discharge, in which case the seller may sue the buyer, under the contract of sale, or bring an action against the banker, under the credit.82 For example, in Saffron v Société Minière Cafrika83 the High Court held that a seller was entitled to maintain an action for the price of goods accepted by the buyer when, through no fault of his own, the seller was unable to recover on a letter of credit. [28-17] Alternative methods of performance. Where a contract may be performed in two or more different ways the contract may or may not provide who has the power to make the choice. If it does so provide, the party entitled to make the choice does so by electing in favour of one method,84 for example, by actually performing in one of the permitted ways. If there is no express provision, the court must decide who has the benefit of the choice and the decision may seem quite arbitrary. For example, in Reed v
Kilburn Co-operative Society,85 the plaintiff lent £50 to the defendants under a contract which provided that the plaintiff had [page 648] agreed to lend the money for a ‘term of nine or six months’. The plaintiff made a demand after six months but the court decided that the choice lay with the defendants, as borrowers. During argument, Blackburn J expressed the rule as being that the party who is to do the first act has the choice, and in this case it was the defendants. Cockburn CJ said, also in argument, that the contract conferred the benefit on the defendants who were the masters of the situation. [28-18] Vicarious performance. A promisor performs a contract vicariously where it performs through a third party. The most common example is subcontracting of a building contract. Two issues arise: whether the promisor is permitted to perform through a third party; and the effect of vicarious performance. Generally, subcontracting is permitted unless the nature or terms of the contract show that the contract is personal to the promisor. If an element of personal skill or expertise or personal confidence exists, vicarious performance will not be permitted.86 To take an obvious example, if A agrees to paint B’s portrait the contract is personal to A, and A cannot subcontract for another person, C, to do the work. On the other hand, in British Waggon Co v Lea & Co,87 the plaintiffs hired certain railway wagons to the defendants and agreed to keep the wagons in repair for the term of the contracts. It was held that there was no element of skill or expertise sufficient to make performance of the contract personal to the plaintiffs. The defendants were therefore bound to pay the hire due under the contracts even though the plaintiffs had assigned the benefit of the contracts to a third party and had not personally carried out the repairs. Whatever the nature of the contract, it may provide, expressly or impliedly, that vicarious performance is not permitted. For example, in Davies v Collins88 the plaintiff entrusted his army uniform to the defendant for cleaning and repair. The uniform was not returned and, for the purposes of the case, was taken to have been lost. The defendant had in fact delivered the uniform to a subcontractor to have the work done. The court held that the terms of the contract impliedly prohibited vicarious performance. The contract provided:
Whilst every care is exercised in cleaning and dyeing all garments, all orders are accepted at owner’s risk entirely and we are unable to hold ourselves responsible for damage, shrinkage, colour or defects developed in necessary handling.
Because it was impossible for the defendant to exercise ‘every care’ in cleaning and dyeing while the work was being done by a third party, and since the subcontract could not be described as ‘necessary handling’, the defendant had no right to subcontract the work. As a general rule, where the promisor performs the contract through a third party (subcontractor) the promisor remains liable on the contract and [page 649] may therefore be sued in contract if the (vicarious) performance is not in accordance with the contract.89 However, if the promisee agrees to accept performance by a third party (or subsequently ratifies what has been done by the promisor) the promisee must accept the performance, even though it may differ from that required by the agreement. For example, if a creditor agrees to accept payment from a third party in discharge of a debt, the creditor will be bound to accept payment, and once the payment has been accepted the debtor is discharged, even if the creditor agreed to accept less than the full amount due.90 Vicarious performance — which relates to the burden of a contract — must be distinguished from assignment. Assignments relate to the right to receive the benefit of performance.91 Although in many cases a promisor can subcontract for a third party to perform its obligations vicariously, on behalf of the promisor, a promisor cannot assign the burden of a contract.
Entitlement to Contract Sum [28-19] Entitlement to enforce. A promisor who is discharged by performance may enforce the promisee’s obligations. It is also clear, however, that even a promisor who is not discharged by performance is generally entitled to enforce the promisee’s obligations if the performance is a substantial performance by the promisor. In considering the position of a promisor who has not fully performed, regard must be to:
the nature of the contract, and the claim made by the promisor; and whether the promisee is discharged, by termination for breach or repudiation or under the doctrine of frustration. [28-20] Nature of the claim and contract. A party who seeks to enforce the other party’s obligations may be seeking to recover damages, claiming the contract price or some other liquidated sum, or pursuing an equitable remedy such as specific performance. In this chapter we deal with claims to recover the ‘contract price’, that is, the money sum which the other party has promised to pay as the price of performance. Other types of claim are discussed elsewhere.92 Where the contract price is sought the courts have generally treated the nature of the contract as crucial, and drawn a distinction between entire and severable contracts.93 [28-21] Contract price not recoverable after discharge by termination. Almost invariably, a party who has been discharged by reason of termination of the performance of the contract for breach or [page 650] repudiation by the other party,94 will not be liable to pay the contract price.95 Similarly, if the contract has been discharged under the doctrine of frustration,96 the contract price is not usually recoverable.97
Entire Contracts [28-22] Definition. An entire contract is one in which the parties have agreed, expressly or impliedly, that complete performance by the promisor is a condition precedent to enforcement of the contract. A contract may be entire if it provides for the payment of a lump sum and ‘no provision is made for setting off a portion of this consideration against a portion of the performance’.98 Most of the cases concern this type of contract, under which complete performance is a condition precedent to recovery of the lump sum. [28-23] Contracts within the definition. Whether or not a contract is entire depends on the construction of the contract.99 However, the fact that the contract provides for a lump sum payment is not conclusive.100 In other words, a contract
which provides for a lump sum payment will not be entire unless the parties have agreed that the sum is to be payable only in the event of complete performance. The main example of an entire contract is a lump sum building contract, where performance by the builder in accordance with the contract is usually a condition precedent to the recovery of payment.101 However, it is common for a contract to be treated as entire for some purposes, but not for others. Thus, an employment contract is entire with respect to time of service: the employee must serve for the entire term as this is a condition precedent to recovery of wages by the employee. However, the contract is not entire from the point of view of the quality of service. Therefore, even though a lump sum payment is provided for, the failure of the employee to serve to the best of his or her ability does not necessarily mean that wages cannot be recovered. The only explanation for this confusing approach is that, in most cases at least, the expression ‘entire obligation’ should be substituted for ‘entire contract’.102 [28-24] Failure of condition precedent precludes enforcement. Where a contract is entire, and the condition precedent has not been fulfilled, the contract price will not be recoverable.103 This is the ‘doctrine’ [page 651] of the entire contract. However, substantial performance by the promisor is usually sufficient to enable recovery of the contract price.104 Certain statutory modifications must also be considered.105 The doctrine of the entire contract does not depend on the existence of a breach of contract: recovery will be refused even if the promisor has an excuse in respect of the failure of the condition precedent. For example, in Cutter v Powell106 a seaman died before he completed the voyage in respect of which he was to be paid. The court took it for granted that, as the seaman had not served for the entire voyage, his executrix could not recover his wages even though there was no breach by the seaman. Nor could she recover a proportionate part of the wages, since the contract did not provide for payment pro rata. The case also illustrates another important feature of the doctrine, namely, that where the condition precedent fails the court will not award a reasonable sum in respect of benefits conferred. Thus, in Cutter v Powell the court refused to allow restitution (a quantum meruit claim), in respect of the services actually rendered by the seaman.107
On the other hand, where the condition precedent fails because the promisee has prevented the promisor performing, the doctrine does not apply108 and the promisor may bring an action to recover the value of any work done,109 or an action for damages if the conduct of the promisee was a breach of contract.110
Severable Contracts [28-25] Definition. A contract which is not entire is usually referred to as a ‘severable’ or ‘divisible’ contract. However, the description is most appropriately used to describe contracts in which the parties have divided the contract price into a number of instalments, each corresponding to a definite proportion of the other party’s performance. For example, where A agrees to make instalment deliveries of goods to B, and B agrees to pay for each instalment when delivered, the contract is severable.111 The mere fact that the contract provides for progress payments towards a lump sum price does not make the contract severable.112 [28-26] Enforcement of a severable part. Where a contract is severable, a promisor may be able to recover in respect of a severable part of the contract, notwithstanding a failure to discharge obligations under the contract. Thus, in Government of Newfoundland v Newfoundland Railway [page 652] Co113 the Newfoundland Government agreed, as part of its obligations under a railway construction contract, to grant the Railway Co title to 5000 acres of land for each mile of railway constructed, on completion of each five-mile section. The Railway Co promised to complete the construction in five years, but completed only 17 of the 68 five-mile sections. One of the issues before the Privy Council was whether the Railway Co was entitled to receive title to the land. It was held that the Government was bound to grant title to 25,000 acres once each section was completed, because each claim to a grant was independent or severable and earned when each section of the railway was completed. The entitlement of a promisor to recover in respect of a severable part nevertheless depends on similar considerations to those applicable to entire contracts. For example, if a seller of goods agrees to make four instalment
deliveries and the buyer accepts the first two deliveries but rejects the third, the seller is entitled to the agreed price for the deliveries made (and accepted) because property in the goods delivered will have passed to the buyer. Similarly, if an employer agrees to make monthly payments to an employee, the latter’s right to recover wages in respect of each month depends, at common law,114 on the performance rendered during that month. If the employee resigns during the second week of a month, the employee will not be entitled to wages for that month because the employer’s obligation to pay is entire with respect to that severable part.115
Statutory Modification [28-27] The apportionment legislation. Under the apportionment legislation, ‘all rents, annuities, dividends and other periodical payments in the nature of income’ are considered as accruing from day to day and are ‘apportionable in respect of time accordingly’.116 The legislation may assist a promisor who would otherwise fail in an action to enforce the other party’s obligation to pay money because of a failure to discharge contractual obligations. However, the legislation is fairly narrow in scope. Thus, it will not apply if the parties have ‘expressly stipulated’117 that no apportionment is to occur. The legislation has also been restrictively interpreted. The legislation applies to ‘periodical’ payments and this is not an appropriate description of sums payable under entire contracts. Accordingly, it would not have assisted the executrix in Cutter v Powell.118 [page 653] However, it might assist a lessor to recover a proportion of the rent which a lessee has agreed to pay and it might assist a salaried employee. The legislation defines119 ‘annuities’ as including ‘salaries’ and an employee whose contract provides for monthly payments of salary might be able to recover, say, three quarters of a promised payment, if three out of the four weeks were completed.120 It is uncertain whether the legislation applies where the promisor is in breach of contract. In principle, the legislation should apply, for example, if the salaried
employee in the example just given has been lawfully dismissed by the employer. The cases do not give any clear guidance on the point.121 [28-28] State and Federal awards. The remuneration of an employee may be governed by State and Federal awards made under statute. When considering the performance of employment contracts, and in particular the employee’s right to recover wages, the effect of such awards must be taken into account.122 The awards are important, for example, in guaranteeing minimum wages and in regulating other matters such as dismissal. However, an award employee’s right to recover wages does not depend solely on the award, since the relationship between the employer and employee is one created by contract.123 In the present context, the main relevance of the existence of an award is that the payment terms of the contract are not conclusive. Thus, an award specification for payment at a daily or hourly rate may assist an employee who would fail at common law because of the rules governing performance. For example, if the contract provides for payment at fortnightly intervals, but the employee is lawfully dismissed in the middle of one of these periods, the employee would fail at common law in an action for a fortnightly wage payment. Since under the award the employee’s wages may accrue daily (or hourly), recovery for the days (or hours) actually worked may be permitted. In this respect the award substitutes a different (and obligatory) method for determining wages from that applicable at common law.124 [page 654] [28-29] Frustrated contracts legislation. Where a contract is frustrated after partial performance by the promisor, legislation in New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia confers a right to recover a sum of money, independently of the terms of the contract, in respect of benefits conferred. The legislation is considered in Chapter 34.125
Doctrine of Substantial Performance [28-30] Origin of the doctrine. The origin of the modern doctrine of substantial performance is Lord Mansfield’s famous statement in Boone v Eyre:126 The distinction is very clear, where mutual covenants go to the whole of the consideration on both sides, they are mutual conditions, the one precedent to the other. But where they go only to a part,
where a breach may be paid for in damages, there the defendant has a remedy on his covenant, and shall not plead it as a condition precedent.
The proceedings in Boone v Eyre were by way of demurrer on a deed whereby the plaintiff conveyed to the defendant the equity of redemption of a plantation in the West Indies, together with its stock of slaves. He covenanted that he had good title to the plantation, and also that he was lawfully possessed of the slaves. In consideration of this, the defendant had paid £5000 and covenanted that if the plaintiff ‘well and truly’ performed his side of the bargain he would pay the plaintiff an annuity of £160 per annum. When the plaintiff alleged a breach by nonpayment of the annuity, the defendant pleaded that the plaintiff was not lawfully possessed of the slaves. The purport of Lord Mansfield’s statement was that the plea was not a good defence because, ‘if it were to be allowed, any one [slave] not being the property of the plaintiff would bar the action’. Therefore, the plaintiff was successful even though the defendant’s obligation to pay the annuity was, arguably, expressly dependent127 on full performance by the plaintiff. The conclusion would presumably have been different had a serious breach been alleged,128 or if the defendant had not received substantial benefits under the deed.129 [28-31] Effect of substantial performance. Except in that limited class of cases where substantial performance is the extent of performance required by the contract,130 substantial performance will not discharge the promisor. Moreover, if there is no excuse for the failure to perform, the promisor will be in breach of contract, and liable in damages. However, unless the promisor breached a condition, the promisee will not be entitled to terminate the performance of the contract. Under the doctrine of substantial performance, the promisee may be held liable to pay the contract price.131 For example, in Hoenig v Isaacs132 a [page 655] contractor was able to recover the balance payable under a contract for work and labour and materials supplied notwithstanding that his work did not correspond exactly to the requirements of the contract. The court found that the cost of remedying the defects in the work was relatively small in proportion to the work that the contractor had agreed to do. His performance was therefore substantial enough to justify holding the defendant liable to pay the balance of the contract
price. In cases where a promisee is held liable to pay the contract price by reason of the promisor’s substantial performance, the former will retain the right to claim compensation in respect of the latter’s failure to perform. This claim may, depending on the circumstances, be pursued as a cross claim or counterclaim for damages or by the enforcement of a right of setoff. 133 [28-32] Scope of the doctrine. The scope of the doctrine of substantial performance is to some extent uncertain. It has been said that the doctrine does not apply unless the promisor’s failure constitutes a breach of contract.134 The rationale for this restriction is that the promisee must be in a position to claim compensation, and the presence of an excuse for the failure to perform will prevent any such claim being made. However, the position is far from clear and it seems more just to hold the promisee liable to pay the whole sum than to deny the promisor any right of recovery at all.135 A second area of uncertainty is what constitutes substantial performance. Although this is essentially a question of fact, the cases illustrate inconsistent approaches. In Hoenig v Isaacs136 the court said the performance can be considered as substantial unless the promisor’s failure goes to the ‘root’ of the contract. On the other hand, in Bolton v Mahadeva137 a contractor agreed to install a heating and hot water system in return for a promised payment of £560. The work was defectively done, and a sum of £174 was required to make the work comply with the requirements of the contract. The court held that the performance rendered was not substantial and restricted the application of the doctrine to cases where a small expenditure by the promisee will make the work conform. A third area of uncertainty is whether the doctrine of substantial performance applies to entire contracts. Generally the view has been taken [page 656] that it does, and the English Court of Appeal certainly proceeded on this basis in Bolton v Mahadeva. On the other hand, in Hoenig v Isaacs the court appears to have taken the view that had the contract been entire the doctrine would not have been applicable. As a matter of strict logic the latter view is correct since, if the parties have agreed that complete performance by the plaintiff is a condition
precedent to recovery, it is difficult to see how the promisee can be required to pay for performance which is not complete. The law was indeed stated in these terms in Mondel v Steel,138 where, referring to a building contract, the court said that ‘the law appears to have construed the contract as not importing that the performance of every portion of the work should be a condition precedent to the payment of the stipulated price’. It seems more realistic to recognise that the contract is not entire than to engraft an inconsistent requirement of substantial performance on an ‘entire’ contract. Accordingly, the proper approach is to identify the term breached, and to consider its nature and the consequences of the breach. The doctrine of substantial performance applies to severable contracts. For example, in Steele v Tardiani139 an employment contract, which provided for remuneration of employees per ton of firewood cut by them, was construed as a severable contract requiring substantial performance in respect of ‘each divisible application of the contract’. This is, however, difficult to reconcile with reasoning in recent English cases on employment contracts. In Miles v Wakefield MDC140 an employee, as part of industrial action, refused to carry out some of his normal Saturday duties. It was held that the employee had no right to wages for weeks in which the conduct took place, because he had not fulfilled the condition precedent to payment — full performance — and had not shown readiness and willingness to work. The employer had deducted only three hours’ pay, and this was regarded as an appropriate (proportionate) deduction.141 The reference to readiness and willingness seems beside the point,142 and upholding the employer’s conduct in making small deductions from wages directs attention away from the gravity of the decision, since the employee, on the House of Lords’ analysis, was not entitled to any payment at all. It seems unrealistic to deny that the rationale for Miles v Wakefield is a policy concern, namely, to discourage industrial action of the type encountered. But, as a matter of contract doctrine the reasoning leaves a lot unexplained. First, there is little analysis of whether the performance was substantial. The idea that substantial performance does not apply to severable contracts is untenable in Australia. However, in cases where performance is not substantial, a sound justification exists for denying that the employee is entitled to payment. Second, in most cases the employee will be engaging in conduct which is repudiatory, and the general approach to such conduct is to treat the employer as faced with a choice between
[page 657] terminating and affirming the contract.143 The courts have struggled to explain how the employer is able to deny the contractual obligation to pay for the services rendered without terminating the contract.144 Third, if the employee merely performs the contract defectively but substantially, the employer must pay full wages (subject to a right to claim damages for loss caused by the employee’s breach of contract), with the result that a formalistic distinction is drawn between incomplete performance and defective performance. It is doubtful whether an Australian court would accept that distinction. The proper analysis relies in all cases on whether performance is substantially in accordance with the contract. The employee is entitled to be paid for substantial performance, subject, of course, to the employer’s claim to damages for breach.145 Finally, there is the problem of reconciling this area of the law with the law applicable to termination for breach. In H Dakin & Co Ltd v Lee146 a Divisional Court approached the doctrine of substantial performance from the point of view of termination for breach, and said that where a builder’s performance is not strictly in accordance with the contract it will nevertheless be regarded as substantial unless the work done is of no value to the other party, is entirely different from that provided for by the contract or the conduct of the builder constitutes a repudiation (‘abandonment’) of the contract. Although this approach has been the subject of criticism,147 it is consistent with Hoenig v Isaacs148 and also the doctrine later developed by the courts in reliance on Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd.149 The need for consistency was arguably ignored150 by the court in Bolton v Mahadeva.151 Under the Hongkong Fir doctrine the issue is whether the promisee has a right to terminate, whereas under the entire contract doctrine the issue is whether the promisor has performed sufficiently. The effect of cases such as Dakin v Lee and Hoenig v Isaacs is to treat the issues as two sides of the same coin.152 This seems logical enough, although difficult to reconcile with the older cases. The doctrine of the entire contract evolved out of the distinction between dependent and independent [page 658]
promises.153 However, the concept of termination did not emerge until the middle of the 19th century.154 This was because if, by reason of a failure in performance, a dependent obligation could not be enforced, it remained unenforceable until the condition precedent had been fulfilled and so there was no need to ask whether the performance of the contract was terminated. The procedural reforms begun in England in the middle of the 19th century, which made precise pleading less important,155 may well have encouraged a focus on the issue of termination rather than dependency of obligation, and perhaps explains the development of two different approaches.
Criticism [28-33] Entire contract terminology. The law governing the enforcement of contractual obligations can be criticised on a number of grounds, one of which is that the terminology is confusing and unhelpful. Although it may be helpful to speak in terms of a distinction between entire and severable obligations, it is not helpful to distinguish entire and severable contracts.156 For example, a contract for the sale of goods is entire with respect to the quantity to be delivered, but not entire in the sense that every breach by the seller precludes recovery of the price of the goods. It has also been shown that interpreting a contract as severable does not necessarily place the promisor in a better position, because the contract may be ‘entire’ with respect to each severable part.157 This reinforces the view that the distinction drawn is between entire and severable obligations not contracts. [28-34] Uncertainty of substantial performance doctrine.158 The second criticism concerns the uncertain nature and scope of the substantial performance doctrine.159 It would seem that two quite different approaches are to be found in the cases. The first, typified by Denning LJ’s judgment in Hoenig v Isaacs,160 treats the right to recover the contract price as determined by the right of the promisee to terminate for breach or repudiation. If there is a right to terminate, because the promisor has breached a condition, repudiated the contract or committed a breach which renders the performance of the contract substantially different, the promisor cannot recover the contract price. The second approach, exemplified by Bolton v Mahadeva,161 conceives of the doctrine applying [page 659]
even though the contract is entire, that is to say, even though the condition precedent of complete performance has not been fulfilled. The divergence of approach indicates that it is difficult to find an acceptable basis for the doctrine. The doctrine may be based on the ‘presumed intention’162 of the parties. However, this is difficult to reconcile with its application in cases where the contract is entire, since by definition the parties have expressed their intention that complete performance is required. In cases where the contract is entire the true basis has been described as the prevention of unjust enrichment.163 However, this ought to lead to recovery on a restitutionary claim rather than an action on the contract. But it is clear that for substantial performance the liability is to pay the contract price rather than the reasonable value of services rendered. The statement in O’Sullivan v O’Leary,164 that the doctrine must rest ‘either upon a benevolent construction of the contract or on some special rule of equity applicable to the relief of specific performance’ is perhaps the best indication of uncertainty generated by the doctrine since it treats the promisor’s action for the contract price as being one for specific performance, which it clearly is not.165 [28-35] Unjust enrichment. The final criticism of the law is the way in which it encourages unjust enrichment. Where a promisor confers benefits on the promisee, but obtains no payment at all, the promisee may be unjustly enriched. In Bolton v Mahadeva166 the result was that the defendant paid nothing for the work, and therefore effectively obtained the system for £174, that is, the sum which was (presumably) paid to a third party to remedy the defects in the system. As the law currently stands,167 the plaintiff would almost certainly have failed in a claim for restitution. It is by no means clear that this is a fair result. There are two possible conclusions. One is that the doctrine of substantial performance does not go far enough, and that (for example) a more flexible approach should be taken to the assessment of what constitutes substantial performance.168 In cases such as Bolton v Mahadeva there is too much stress on the cost of remedying the defects of the promisor’s performance. A substantial benefit was obtained and in such cases it is appropriate to use the value of the work done as the guide.169 The second is that reform of the law of restitution is required, since application of the principle of unjust enrichment is the better approach to the problems which arise on partial (but not substantial) performance of a contract.170
[page 660]
Unilateral Contracts, Options and Aleatory Contracts [28-36] Unilateral contracts. The feature which characterises unilateral contracts is that there is only one promisor, whose obligation to perform arises on the occurrence of an event in respect of which no promise has been made.171 For example, if A promises to pay B $100 if B locates A’s lost dog, and B, although making no promise, finds the animal in reliance on A’s promise, B will be entitled to recover payment under the contract. The applicable rule is clear: performance must conform exactly with the requirements of the contract; there is no room for a doctrine of substantial performance. In some cases it may be doubtful whether a bilateral or unilateral relation exists between the parties. For example, in United Dominions Trust (Commercial) Ltd v Eagle Aircraft Services Ltd,172 A sold two aircraft to B who then let them out on hire-purchase to C. An agreement between A and B provided that A would repurchase the aircraft when called upon by B to do so. C defaulted under the hire-purchase contracts and these were terminated by B. However, B did not call upon A to repurchase the aircraft under the agreement until more than six months later. The English Court of Appeal held that B could not enforce A’s obligation to repurchase because the latter’s obligation was subject to a contingency that B would call upon A to repurchase within a reasonable time which had, in the circumstances, expired. Had the court interpreted the contract as containing a promise by B to call upon A within a reasonable period of time the contract would have been bilateral, and some inquiry would have been made into the nature of B’s breach. This inquiry was not possible, or relevant, because the contract was unilateral. [28-37] Options. An option is like a unilateral contract in that the optionee, that is, the person to whom the option is granted, does not promise to exercise it.173 The optionor’s obligation to perform, for example, to sell land, becomes enforceable on the fulfilment of a contingency, namely, exercise of the option. The requirements of the option must be strictly complied with. For example, in Hare v Nicoll174 an option relating to shares required the optionee to pay their price before 1 June 1963. When the optionee failed to pay before that date the
court held that he was unable to enforce the optionor’s obligation as he had not exercised the option according to its terms. The requirements of the option may include the due performance of another contract. For example, a lease which includes an option to purchase the land or to renew the lease may state, as one of its requirements, that the optionee fulfil its obligations under the lease. At [page 661] common law the optionee (lessee) will be precluded from exercising the option if in breach of the lease.175 [28-38] Aleatory contracts. In aleatory contracts the promisor’s obligation to perform becomes enforceable on the occurrence of a fortuitous event. The event is fortuitous because neither party desires it to occur, and neither makes any promise that it will occur. For example, if A contracts with B that B will insure A’s house against fire, B’s obligation to perform becomes enforceable once the house has been damaged or destroyed by fire. Such contracts are distinguishable from ordinary bilateral contracts because enforcement depends on a fortuitous event rather than performance by the other party. Thus, once the premium has been paid it is not appropriate to ask whether A has performed, or substantially performed, the question is simply whether fire has occurred. Of course, the promisor’s obligation to perform may be subject to qualifications or provisos. For example, an insurance contract may require a claim to be made within a specified period of time. In relation to such matters three questions may be relevant: what constitutes compliance; whether compliance is the subject of a promise; and whether strict compliance is a condition precedent to enforcement of the promise. The contract in United Dominions Trust (Commercial) Ltd v Eagle Aircraft Services Ltd176 was aleatory in nature, and the case illustrates a tendency to treat compliance as a non-promissory matter, with the result that strict compliance is a condition precedent. This may have severe consequences for the party seeking to enforce the contract. Thus, in Tricontinental Corp Ltd v HDFI Ltd177 the ability
to enforce a promise analogous to a guarantee of a debtor’s obligations was subject to formal requirements, including sending a notice of demand to a particular address. It was held that the requirements were non-promissory conditions precedent, not subject to any implied requirement of substantial fulfilment. Accordingly, whether or not there was any prejudice to the promisor, the failure to give a proper notice meant that the promise was not enforceable. The aleatory nature of a contract of guarantee explains one special rule applicable to such contracts. An agreement between the debtor and a creditor, which varies the debtor-creditor contract, will discharge the guarantor, unless the variation is insubstantial or to the benefit of the guarantor.178 [page 662]
Suspension and Termination of Performance179 [28-39] Suspension of performance. In certain circumstances a party may suspend the performance of a contract. It is important, however, to distinguish the right of a party to refuse to perform or suspend the performance of his or her own obligations from the right to suspend performance by the other party as well. To avoid confusion the former will be referred to as a right to withhold performance. An ability to withhold performance is fairly common.180 This may be conferred by the contract, as where a party’s obligation to perform is expressly made ‘subject to’ performance by the other party. It may also be conferred by statute. For example, under the sale of goods legislation an unpaid seller of goods may be entitled to withhold delivery from the buyer until payment or tender of the price.181 More generally, where one party’s obligation to perform is dependent on the other party’s prior performance (or readiness and willingness to perform), the first party is entitled to withhold performance until the second party has performed (or shown readiness and willingness). In other words, until the condition precedent has been fulfilled the party for whose benefit it operates is under no obligation to perform.182 For example, an employer is entitled to withhold wages until the employee has performed, and in a case where the employer is obliged to provide work,183 is entitled to withhold performance by
not providing work for an employee who is not ready and willing to work.184 It was explained earlier185 that a promisee is not usually entitled to an assurance from the promisor that he or she will perform when the time for performance arrives. It follows that a promisee cannot usually demand an assurance from the promisor and withhold performance if none is given. However, under Art 71 of the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods 1980, which applies to international contracts for sale of goods, a party is entitled to withhold (‘suspend’) its own performance if it becomes apparent that the other party will not perform a substantial part of that party’s obligations as a result of (1) a serious deficiency in ability or in creditworthiness; or (2) that party’s conduct in performing or preparing to perform. The party who withheld its performance must continue with performance if the other party provides an adequate assurance of performance.186 [page 663] A contract may expressly suspend the parties’ performance until the occurrence of a stated event, as where the obligation to perform a contract for the sale of land is ‘subject to’ the execution of a formal document.187 Sometimes a right to withhold or suspend performance is associated with a right of termination, but a right to suspend does not generally arise unless expressly conferred by the contract.188 Thus, the conferral of an express right to terminate does not of itself provide the party with a choice between terminating189 and withholding or suspending performance. The courts have been reluctant to imply either right.190 Whatever the source of the right to terminate, it is usually said that there is no ‘half-way house’191 between termination and the obligation to perform. Thus, an employer cannot suspend an employee — and so suspend the performance of the contract — merely because the employee has repudiated contractual obligations:192 the employer must be able to point to an express (or implied) term giving the right. Nevertheless, in practice a repudiation of obligation effectively confers on the other party a right to withhold performance, at least for a reasonable period of time. This is the period allowed for exercise of the right to terminate193 and this implies that he or she is not obliged to perform during this period.194 [28-40] Termination of performance. Termination of performance refers to the
termination of a promisor’s obligation to perform contractual duties.195 Termination may occur: as the result of an express agreement;196 on the exercise of a right to terminate for breach or repudiation;197 on the exercise of a statutory right;198 or (automatically) by reason of the ‘frustration’ of a contract.199 [page 664] Termination differs from suspension by reason of its finality. If the performance of a contract is merely suspended the parties can resume performance of the original contract. Where performance is terminated, any resumption of performance must be considered as occurring under a new contract.200 The distinction is, however, sometimes difficult to maintain. For example, where a seller of goods, in breach of condition, tenders goods which are not of merchantable quality, the buyer may withhold performance, by not accepting the goods. But the buyer’s action will amount to termination if the buyer does not provide the seller with an opportunity to deliver conforming goods at a later stage. 1.
(1951) 84 CLR 377 at 407–8.
2.
See further Chapters 30–34 (perspective of discharge).
3.
See [28-02]–[29-12].
4.
See [29-13]–[29-19].
5.
See [12-03].
6.
See [12-02].
7.
Hick v Raymond [1893] AC 22 at 32; Canning v Temby (1905) 3 CLR 419 at 424. The principle also applies where the time stipulated for performance expires without either party being in breach: Electronic Industries Ltd v David Jones Ltd (1954) 91 CLR 288.
8.
See, eg Postlethwaite v Freeland (1880) 5 App Cas 599 at 608, 621; Perri v Coolangatta Investments Pty Ltd (1982) 149 CLR 537 at 567–8; 41 ALR 441.
9.
S J Stoljar, ‘Dependent and Independent Promises’ (1957) 2 Syd LR 217.
10.
Burton v Palmer [1980] 2 NSWLR 878 at 895. See also Newcombe v Newcombe (1934) 34 SR (NSW) 446 at 450 (implied term).
11.
Nichols v Raynbred (1615) Hob 88; 80 ER 238. Contrast Peeters v Opie (1677) 2 Wms Saund 346; 85 ER 1141.
12.
(1669) 1 Wms Saund 319; 85 ER 449.
13.
Campbell v Jones (1796) 6 TR 570 at 572; 101 ER 708 at 709.
14.
Ritchie v Atkinson (1808) 10 East 295 at 306; 103 ER 787 at 791.
15.
See [28-07]–[28-08].
16.
ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 52(2); NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 51(2); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 51(2); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 50(2); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 48(2); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 53(2); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 55(2); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 48(2).
17.
See [28-08].
18.
Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v Watson (1946) 72 CLR 435 at 465; Graham v Baker (1961) 106 CLR 340 at 345. See further [28-24]. For the position in respect of periodic payments see [28-26].
19.
See further [28-20].
20.
See [28-09], [28-10], [28-30]–[28-32]. See also [30-47].
21.
See [13-19].
22.
The main authorities were Kingston v Preston (1773) 2 Doug 689; 99 ER 437; Jones v Barkley (1781) 2 Doug 684; 99 ER 434. For a more recent case see Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385; 88 ALR 413.
23.
Morton v Lamb (1797) 7 TR 125 at 129; 101 ER 890 at 892; Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385. Readiness and willingness includes an ability to perform. See [30-29].
24.
ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 32; NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 31; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 31; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 30; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 28; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 33; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 35; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 28.
25.
The expression ‘concurrent conditions’ is, however, apt to cause confusion; see [13-19].
26.
See [28-06].
27.
See [37-04].
28.
See, eg Harry Davies & Co Pty Ltd v East [1925] VLR 681; McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457; and [37-21].
29.
See Insurance Co of Africa v Scor (UK) Reinsurance Co Ltd [1985] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 312; Trans-Pacific Insurance Co (Australia) Ltd v Grand Union Insurance Co Ltd (1989) 18 NSWLR 675.
30.
See Elisabeth Peden, ‘Co-operation in English Contract Law: to Construe or Imply’ (2000) 16 JCL 56. See further [28-08].
31.
(1881) 6 App Cas 251 at 263. See also Thompson v ASDA-MFI Group Plc [1988] Ch 241 at 253; and generally J F Burrows, ‘Contractual Co-operation and the Implied Term’ (1968) 31 MLR 390.
32.
(1979) 144 CLR 596 at 607; 26 ALR 567.
33.
(1896) 7 QLJ 68 at 70–1.
34.
See [28-10].
35.
(1997) 189 CLR 215 at 219; 143 ALR 569 at 570–1.
36.
See Luxor (Eastbourne) Ltd v Cooper [1941] AC 108 at 148–9.
37.
See Sprague v Booth [1909] AC 576 at 580.
38.
Newmont Pty Ltd v Laverton Nickel NL (1982) 44 ALR 598 at 606.
39.
See generally [39-01]–[39-12].
40.
Colley v Overseas Exporters [1921] 3 KB 302. See also Plaimar Ltd v Waters Trading Co Ltd (1945) 72 CLR 304 (CIF contract). Contrast Martin v Hogan (1917) 24 CLR 234, the decision in which
depended on the pleadings. 41.
See further [37-04].
42.
See generally on good faith Chapter 2.
43.
(1984) 156 CLR 41 at 137–8; 55 ALR 417. See further H O Hunter, ‘The Duty of Good Faith and Security of Performance’ (1993) 6 JCL 19.
44.
See, eg Shepherd v Felt and Textiles of Australia Ltd (1931) 45 CLR 370 (see [30-21]); Renard Constructions (ME) Pty Ltd v Minister for Public Works (1992) 26 NSWLR 234 per Priestley JA. See E A Farnsworth, ‘Good Faith in Contract Performance’ in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995, p 153 and further [29-02]. Cf Hugh Collins, ‘Implied Duty to Give Information During Performance of Contracts’ (1992) 55 MLR 556.
45.
See Service Station Association Ltd v Berg Bennett & Associates Pty Ltd (1993) 117 ALR 393 at 401–3; CGU Workers Compensation (NSW) Ltd v Garcia (2007) 69 NSWLR 680 at 704; [2007] NSWCA 193 at [132]. Cf GSA Group Pty Ltd v Siebe Plc (1993) 30 NSWLR 573 at 579–80. See also Australian Mutual Provident Society v 400 St Kilda Road Pty Ltd [1991] 2 VR 417 (implied term would have been inconsistent with express term).
46.
See, eg Lock v Westpac Banking Corp (1991) 25 NSWLR 593 at 607–8.
47.
See [31-17].
48.
Cf Park v Brothers (2005) 222 ALR 421 at 432 (HC). See [29-02].
49.
See Breen v Williams (1996) 186 CLR 71; 138 ALR 259 (see J W Carter and G J Tolhurst (1997) 12 JCL 152; Jane Swanton and Barbara McDonald (1997) 71 ALJ 332).
50.
(1864) 5 B & S 840 at 852; 122 ER 1043 at 1047. See also CSS Investments Pty Ltd v Lopiron Pty Ltd (1987) 76 ALR 463 at 479–80.
51.
Arguably a failure to co-operate must also prevent performance: Sametiet M/T Johs Stove v Istanbul Petrol Rafinerisi A/S (The Johs Stove) [1984] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 38 at 40.
52.
See generally on repudiation [30-28]–[30-47].
53.
See, eg Hotham v East India Co (1787) 1 TR 638 at 645; 99 ER 1295 at 1299. See further [37-02].
54.
Cf Mackay v Dick (1881) 6 App Cas 251 (see [28-09]).
55.
Cf Bolwell Fibreglass Pty Ltd v Foley [1984] VR 97 (building contract).
56.
See, eg Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW), r 14.11. Cf Bahr v Nicolay (No 2) (1988) 164 CLR 604; 78 ALR 1.
57.
See Australian National Airlines Commission v Robinson [1977] VR 87 at 91; Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385 at 393.
58.
(1669) 1 Wms Saund 319; 85 ER 449 (see [28-06]). The pleading was not material where an independent obligation was in issue: Graves v Legg (1854) 9 Ex 709 at 716; 156 ER 304 at 307. Later, a plaintiff (or defendant) was required to plead generally the performance or fulfilment of all conditions precedent; see Maynard v Goode (1926) 37 CLR 529 at 540.
59.
Cooper v Australian Electric Co (1922) Ltd (1922) 25 WALR 66 at 67.
60.
See [29-03].
61.
Under the rule de minimis non curat lex. See, eg Shipton Anderson & Co v Weil Bros & Co [1912] 1 KB 574.
62.
(1938) 61 CLR 286. See also Bowes v Chaleyer (1923) 32 CLR 159.
63.
See, eg Arcos Ltd v E A Ronaasen & Son [1933] AC 470 at 479.
64.
See M S Fashions Ltd v Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA [1993] Ch 425 at 446.
65.
Bills of Exchange Act 1909 (Cth), s 50.
66.
Bunbury Foods Pty Ltd v National Bank of Australasia Ltd (1984) 153 CLR 491; 51 ALR 609.
67.
Short v Stone (1846) 8 QB 358; 115 ER 911.
68.
See, eg Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati [1957] 2 QB 401. For an exception see [28-39]. See further [30-44].
69.
Electronic Industries Ltd v David Jones Ltd (1954) 91 CLR 288 at 295.
70.
M’Clure v Ripley (1850) 5 Ex 140; 155 ER 60; Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385.
71.
Sinason-Teicher Inter-American Grain Corp v Oilcakes and Oilseeds Trading Co Ltd [1954] 2 All ER 497 (affirmed [1954] 3 All ER 468). See also, in the sale of land context, Kershaw v Forster Pastoral Pty Ltd (1985) 3 BPR 9515; Beard v Wratislaw (1991) [1993] 2 Qd R 494 (see Scott Atkins (1995) 8 JCL 275).
72.
Cf Sunbird Plaza Pty Ltd v Maloney (1988) 166 CLR 245; 77 ALR 205 (land).
73.
Borrowman v Free (1878) 4 QBD 500; Motor Oil Hellas (Corinth) Refineries SA v Shipping Corp of India (The Kanchenjunga) [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 391 at 399.
74.
ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 33(5); NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 32(4); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 32(5); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 31(4); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 29(4); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 34(4); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 36(4); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 29(4).
75.
Section 36(1) of the Reserve Bank Act 1959 (Cth) provides that Australian notes are legal tender throughout Australia.
76.
Startup v Macdonald (1843) 6 Man & G 593; 134 ER 1029.
77.
See [37-04].
78.
R V Ward Ltd v Bignall [1967] 1 QB 534.
79.
See, eg Stirling Properties Ltd v Yerba Pty Ltd (1987) 74 ACTR 1. On the other hand, in commercial transactions a bank cheque is equivalent to cash. See Perel v Australian Bank of Commerce (1923) 24 SR (NSW) 62 at 75 (on appeal sub nom Australian Bank of Commerce Ltd v Perel [1926] AC 737).
80.
This analysis is not applicable to the deposit of a cheque in a bank account: National Australia Bank Ltd v KDS Construction Services Pty Ltd (1987) 163 CLR 668; 76 ALR 27.
81.
See, eg Tilley v Official Receiver (1960) 103 CLR 529; W J Alan & Co Ltd v El Nasr Export and Import Co [1972] 2 QB 189 at 210. For the effect of payment by credit card see Re Charge Card Services Ltd [1989] Ch 497; American Express International Inc v Commissioner of State Revenue (2004) 10 VR 145 at 153.
82.
This was the position in W J Alan & Co Ltd v El Nasr Export and Import Co [1972] 2 QB 189.
83.
(1958) 100 CLR 231.
84.
See, eg Timmerman v Nervina Industries (International) Pty Ltd [1983] 2 Qd R 261.
85.
(1875) LR 10 QB 264. See also Head v Kelk (1963) 63 SR (NSW) 340 at 345–6.
86.
Bruce v Tyley (1916) 21 CLR 277.
87.
(1880) 5 QBD 149.
88.
[1945] 1 All ER 247.
89.
Stewart v Reavell’s Garage [1952] 2 QB 545.
90.
Hirachand Punamchand v Temple [1911] 2 KB 330. But it must be made clear to the creditor that the
offer of a smaller sum is being made to satisfy the whole amount of the debt: Waghorn v Linden Manufacturing Pty Ltd [1970] 3 NSWR 559. Cf [6-59]. 91.
See generally Chapter 17.
92.
See Chapters 35–36; [39-01]–[39-12]. Cf [37-18]–[37-24].
93.
See [28-22]–[28-35].
94.
See generally Chapters 30–32.
95.
But see Westralian Farmers Ltd v Commonwealth Agricultural Service Engineers Ltd (1936) 54 CLR 361 at 369.
96.
See generally Chapter 33.
97.
But cf [34-17].
98.
G L Williams, ‘Partial Performance of Entire Contracts’ (1941) 57 LQR 373.
99.
Purcell v Bacon (1914) 19 CLR 241 at 249 (reversed on other grounds sub nom Bacon v Purcell (1916) 22 CLR 307).
100. William Thomas & Sons v Harrowing SS Co [1915] AC 58 at 63. 101. Sumpter v Hedges [1898] 1 QB 673 (see [38-25]). 102. See Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1993) 176 CLR 344 at 350, 384; 111 ALR 289. 103. Phillips v Ellinson Bros Pty Ltd (1941) 65 CLR 221. 104. See [28-30]–[28-32]. 105. See [28-27]–[28-29]. 106. (1795) 6 TR 320; 101 ER 573. See S J Stoljar, ‘The Great Case of Cutter v Powell’ (1956) 34 Can B Rev 288; Martin Dockray, ‘Cutter v Powell: a Trip Outside the Text’ (2001) 117 LQR 664. 107. See further [34-10]. 108. Forman & Co Pty Ltd v The Ship ‘Liddesdale’ [1900] AC 190 at 202. 109. See [38-22]. 110. See generally Chapters 35–36. 111. Mersey Steel and Iron Co Ltd v Naylor Benzon & Co (1884) 9 App Cas 434. 112. See Gilbert-Ash (Northern) Ltd v Modern Engineering (Bristol) Ltd [1974] AC 689 at 717. 113. (1888) 13 App Cas 199. 114. For the position under statute see [28-27], [28-28]. 115. Steele v Tardiani (1946) 72 CLR 386. 116. ACT: Civil Law (Property) Act 2006, s 250; NSW: Conveyancing Act 1919, s 144(1); NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 212(1); Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 232; SA: Law of Property Act 1936, s 64; Tas: Apportionment Act 1871, s 2; Vic: Supreme Court Act 1986, s 54; WA: Property Law Act 1969, s 131. 117. ACT: Civil Law (Property) Act 2006, s 253(2); NSW: Conveyancing Act 1919, s 144(5); NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 213(2); Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 233(2); SA: Law of Property Act 1936, s 68; Tas: Apportionment Act 1871, s 7; Vic: Supreme Court Act 1986, s 53(4); WA: Property Law Act 1969, s 134(2). 118. (1795) 6 TR 320; 101 ER 573 (see [28-24]).
119. ACT: Civil Law (Property) Act 2006, s 248; NSW: Conveyancing Act 1919, s 142; NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 211; Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 231; SA: Law of Property Act 1936, s 63; Tas: Apportionment Act 1871, s 5; Vic: Supreme Court Act 1986, s 53(1); WA: Property Law Act 1969, s 130(1). 120. But see Paul Matthews, ‘“Salaries” in the Apportionment Act 1870’ (1982) 2 Legal Studies 302. 121. Doubts were expressed in Moriarty v Regent’s Garage and Engineering Co Ltd [1921] 1 KB 423 at 434 (reversed without reference to the point [1921] 2 KB 766). Contrast Sim v Rotherham MBC [1987] Ch 216 and see S M Waddams, ‘Restitution for the Part Performer’, in Reiter and Swan, eds, Studies in Contract Law, 1980, p 162. 122. See G J McCarry, ‘No Work, No Pay’ (1983) 57 ALJ 378. 123. Amalgamated Collieries of WA Ltd v True (1938) 59 CLR 417 at 423 (and on appeal sub nom True v Amalgamated Collieries of WA Ltd [1940] AC 537 at 546); Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 419–20; 131 ALR 422. See also Metropolitan Health Service Board v Australian Nursing Federation (2000) 176 ALR 46 at 53. 124. See Mallinson v Scottish Australian Investment Co Ltd (1920) 28 CLR 66 at 72–3; Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 419–20. See also Huskisson RSL Sub-Branch Club Ltd v Sullivan (1990) 20 NSWLR 332 at 343ff; Ansett Transport Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd v Australian Federation of Air Pilots (No 2) [1991] 2 VR 636 at 638. 125. See [34-12]–[34-42]. 126. (1777) 1 H Bl 273n; 126 ER 160. 127. See [28-07]. 128. See Glazebrook v Woodrow (1799) 8 TR 366 at 374; 101 ER 1436 at 1441. 129. See Ellen v Topp (1851) 6 Ex 424 at 442; 155 ER 609 at 616; Graves v Legg (1854) 9 Ex 709 at 717; 156 ER 304 at 307. 130. See [28-13]. 131. The action is on the contract, not for restitution. A contrary statement in Connor v Stainton (1924) 27 WALR 72 at 73–4 is incorrect: Simpson Steel Structures v Spencer [1964] WAR 101 at 104. 132. [1952] 2 All ER 176. See also Lemura v Coppola [1960] Qd R 308; Zamperoni Decorators Pty Ltd v Lo Presti [1983] VR 338. Cf Williamson v Murdoch (1912) 14 WALR 54. 133. See Bolton v Mahadeva [1972] 1 WLR 1009 at 1015. 134. O’Sullivan v O’Leary [1955] VLR 52 at 58. But see William Thomas & Sons v Harrowing SS Co [1915] AC 58. 135. Query the position where the claim is for restitution in respect of an unenforceable contract. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 1031. 136. [1952] 2 All ER 176. 137. [1972] 1 WLR 1009. 138. (1841) 8 M & W 858 at 870; 151 ER 1288 at 1293. 139. (1946) 72 CLR 386 at 401. 140. [1987] AC 539. Cf Csomore v Public Service Board of New South Wales (1986) 10 NSWLR 587. 141. Cf Sim v Rotherham MBC [1987] Ch 216 (equitable set-off) (see B W Napier [1987] CLJ 44). 142. See [28-08].
143. Fercometal SARL v Mediterranean Shipping Co SA [1989] AC 788 at 805. But cf [30-47]. 144. One suggestion is that it is impossible in large organisations to know which employees are working in accordance with their contracts. Although this may be true, it is difficult to see why it should disentitle the employee to reliance on normal contract principles. 145. B W Napier, ‘Aspects of the Wage-Work Bargain’ [1984] CLJ 337 at 342, 348; J W Shaw and Robert McClelland, ‘Selective Work Bans: “No Work No Pay” Revisited’ (1986) 3 Aust Bar Rev 250 at 256– 7. See also G F Smith, ‘Part Work No Pay?’ (1989) 2 AJLL 91. Contrast Greg McCarry (1987) 3 Aust Bar Rev 174 at 177. 146. [1916] 1 KB 566. 147. See Vigers v Cook [1919] 2 KB 475 at 483–4; Eshelby v Federated European Bank Ltd [1932] 1 KB 423 at 431. 148. [1952] 2 All ER 176 (see [28-31]). See also Lemura v Coppola [1960] Qd R 308 at 314. 149. [1962] 2 QB 26 (see [30-22]–[30-27]). 150. See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, §6-92. 151. [1972] 1 WLR 1009 (see [28-32]). 152. Cf Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1993) 176 CLR 344 at 350. 153. See [28-05]–[28-08]. 154. Glaholm v Hays (1841) 2 Man & G 257 at 265; 133 ER 743 at 746, is an early example. 155. See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, §1-14. 156. See G H Treitel, ‘Some Problems of Breach of Contract’ (1967) 30 MLR 139. See also [28-23]. 157. See [28-26]. 158. See Anthony Beck, ‘The Doctrine of Substantial Performance: Conditions and Conditions Precedent’ (1975) 38 MLR 413. 159. See [28-32]. 160. [1952] 2 All ER 176 (see [28-31]). 161. [1972] 1 WLR 1009 (see [28-32]). But cf O’Sullivan v O’Leary [1955] VLR 52 at 58. 162. Corio Guarantee Corp Ltd v McCallum [1956] VLR 755 at 760. 163. See S J Stoljar, ‘Substantial Performance in Building Contracts’ (1954–56) 3 UWALR 293 at 307. 164. [1955] VLR 52 at 58 per Gavan Duffy J. Cf Simpson Steel Structures v Spencer [1964] WAR 101 at 105 (‘equity relieving against forfeiture’). 165. See [37-03]. 166. [1972] 1 WLR 1009 (see [28-32]). 167. Sumpter v Hedges [1898] 1 QB 673 still governs the position. See [38-25]. 168. A flexible approach has been part of US law for some time. See Jacob & Youngs Inc v Kent 129 NE 889 (1921). 169. There is support for this in Finlayson v James [1986] BTLC 163; Ruxley Electronics and Constructions Ltd v Forsyth [1996] AC 344 at 367. 170. See [38-25]. 171. See [3-49]. 172. [1968] 1 All ER 104 (see P S Atiyah (1968) 31 MLR 332).
173. On the nature of option contracts see [3-48]. 174. [1966] 2 QB 130. See also Re Gray decd [2005] 1 WLR 815 at 820. Cf Lewes Nominees Pty Ltd v Strang (1983) 49 ALR 328. 175. Gilbert J McCaul (Aust) Pty Ltd v Pitt Club Ltd (1957) 59 SR (NSW) 122. See also Traywinds Pty Ltd v Cooper [1989] 1 Qd R 222; B S Stillwell & Co Pty Ltd v Budget Rent-A-Car System Pty Ltd [1990] VR 589. However, relief against forfeiture may be available under statute. See NSW: Conveyancing Act 1919, s 133E; Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 128; WA: Property Law Act 1969, s 83C. 176. [1968] 1 All ER 104 (see [28-36]). 177. (1990) 21 NSWLR 689. See also Bond v Hongkong Bank of Australia Ltd (1991) 25 NSWLR 286. For discussion see J W Carter, ‘Conditions and Conditions Precedent’ (1991) 4 JCL 90; Lee Aitken [1992] LMCLQ 177. 178. See Ankar Pty Ltd v National Westminster Finance (Australia) Ltd (1987) 162 CLR 549 at 558–60, 568–9; 70 ALR 641. 179. See J W Carter, ‘Suspending Contract Performance for Breach’, in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995, p 485. 180. See Beale, Remedies for Breach of Contract, 1980, pp 16–49. 181. See ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 44; NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 43; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 43; Qld: d 1896, s 42; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 40; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 45; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 47; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 40. 182. Subject to the substantial performance doctrine discussed [28-30]–[28-32]. 183. See, eg Curro v Beyond Productions Pty Ltd (1993) 30 NSWLR 337 at 343. 184. See Australian National Airlines Commission v Robinson [1977] VR 87. 185. See [28-14]. 186. For discussion of the similar right under the UNIDROIT Principles for International Commercial Contracts (1994) see J W Carter, ‘Adequate Assurance of Due Performance’ (1996) 11 JCL 1. 187. See [5-04] (condition precedent to contract performance). 188. See, eg Gilbert-Ash (Northern) Ltd v Modern Engineering (Bristol) Ltd [1974] AC 689. 189. For the distinction between withholding performance and terminating performance see [28-40]. 190. Steelwood Carriers Inc of Monrovia Liberia v Evimeria Compania Naviera SA of Panama (The Agios Giorgis) [1976] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 192. 191. Tankexpress A/S v Compagnie Financière Belge des Petroles SA (The Petrofina) [1949] AC 76 at 91. See also Fercometal SARL v Mediterranean Shipping Co SA [1989] AC 788 at 805; Channel Tunnel Group Ltd v Balfour Beatty Construction Ltd [1992] 1 QB 656 at 666 (affirmed without reference to the point [1993] AC 334). 192. See, eg Hanley v Pease & Partners Ltd [1915] 1 KB 698. A contrary statement by Fullagar J in Welbourne v Australian Postal Commission (1983) 52 ALR 669 at 688 is difficult to follow, in view of the acceptance (at 685) of Hanley as good law; see G J McCarry (1984) 58 ALJ 226. Cf Csomore v Public Service Board of New South Wales (1986) 10 NSWLR 587. 193. See [31-18]. 194. But withholding performance may be interpreted as an election to terminate; see [31-04]. In fact, the distinction is frequently difficult to maintain; see [28-40]. 195. See [32-01].
196. See [9-26]. 197. See generally Chapter 30–32. 198. See, eg Australian Consumer Law, s 265. 199. See generally Chapters 33–34. 200. Newbon v City Mutual Life Assurance Society Ltd (1935) 52 CLR 723 at 733. Exceptionally, the court may order specific performance after termination, or reinstate the contract, when giving relief against forfeiture; see [31-13].
[page 665]
Chapter 29
Breach of Contract [29-01] Forms of breach. There are two forms of breach of contract: failure to perform; and anticipatory breach. A failure to perform occurs if a promisor, without lawful excuse, fails to discharge a contractual obligation. An anticipatory breach arises where, prior to the time appointed for performance by the promisor, the promisee justifiably terminates the performance of the contract. The promisee’s termination will be justified if the words or conduct of the promisor, or the promisor’s actual position, give rise to a repudiation of obligation1 or indicate that the promisor was wholly and finally disabled2 from performing the contract. The basic distinction between the two forms of breach is the time of occurrence: a failure to perform can only occur after the time for performance has expired; an anticipatory breach precedes the time of performance. A breach may, however, be of a hybrid kind, for example, where the promisor not only fails to perform but also repudiates future contractual obligations.3 There is one other distinction between the two forms of breach. A failure to perform need not give rise to a right to terminate whereas an anticipatory breach arises, if at all, on termination of the performance of the contract.4 Thus, if, prior to the time for performance, a promisor repudiates contractual obligations the breach only occurs if the promisee terminates performance. If there is no termination, but the promisor continues to repudiate, a breach will arise once the promisor fails to perform, but this breach is a failure to perform rather than an anticipatory breach. [page 666]
Proof of Breach [29-02] Bad faith performance.5 In some situations performance which is not in good faith will constitute a breach of contract. But it is not meaningful to speak of ‘bad faith performance’ unless there is a duty to act in good faith. Such a duty may arise for a number of reasons. First, there are some contracts of a fiduciary nature which necessarily create a relationship under which one party is expected to act in good faith towards the other. Thus, an agency contract requires the agent to exercise good faith when performing the contract. Therefore, performance in a way which indicates bad faith, such as dealing with a third party on behalf of the principal but with the object of imposing onerous and unprofitable obligations on the principal, will amount to a breach.6 Alternatively, the relationship may be such that both parties are subject to good faith obligations, as under a partnership contract.7 Second, a contract may include an express term requiring good faith performance.8 Third, there may be an implied term to the same effect. Breach of the duty of co-operation9 will frequently occur by reason of a failure to act in good faith. Because of the general willingness to imply that duty, relief will often be available against a party who has acted in bad faith. Indeed, it is not inappropriate to say that the content of the duty to co-operate is informed by a desire to police bad faith.10 It follows that performance which discharges a party does not amount to a breach of contract merely because a reasonable person would consider that a party has not acted in good faith.11 Therefore, the general rule is that performance complying with the contract is not converted into a breach merely by reference to the intention of the promisor.12 In Secretary of State for Employment v ASLEF (No 2),13 there was an industrial dispute in which the employees had engaged in ‘work to rule’ conduct with the object of disrupting the employer’s business. A majority of the court held that this was a breach of an implied term that the employees would not perform their contractual obligations in a way which made it impossible for the employers to carry on their business.14 Although Lord Denning MR may [page 667]
have gone further,15 and suggested that there can be a breach of contract by bad faith performance even though no term of the contract has been breached, the subsequent cases have not taken that approach. [29-03] Onus of proof. Where a promisee alleges that the promisor has breached the contract the onus of proof rests on the promisee.16 The rule holds true not only in the case of failure to perform but also in cases of anticipatory breach.
Failure to Perform [29-04] Scope of the concept. The failure to perform concept embraces three types of breach: nonperformance; defective performance; and late performance. However, the concept is not limited to failures in respect of promises to do things in the future or to bring about results. Accordingly, contractual undertakings (‘warranties’)17 as to the truth or reliability of statements may, if terms of the contract, be the subject of a failure to perform.18
Nonperformance and Defective Performance [29-05] Nonperformance. Superficially, the most straightforward type of failure to perform is nonperformance. A promisor who makes no attempt to perform is guilty of nonperformance. But a case of nonperformance may also arise even though the promisor has attempted to perform. The supply of a different article is a clear example of nonperformance. The time-honoured example of this is the seller who sends beans when the contract requires the delivery of peas.19 A case of nonperformance may also arise as the result of the termination of the performance of a contract. For example, assume that a seller agrees to sell a specific motor vehicle to a buyer. Assume also that, because it is not fit for the buyer’s purposes, the buyer rejects the vehicle and announces that the contract is terminated because of the seller’s breach. If the buyer’s termination is justified, because the seller has breached an express or implied condition, and property in the goods has not passed to the buyer, the effect of termination is to render the
seller guilty of nonperformance, and liable in damages for non-delivery. [page 668] [29-06] Defective performance. A promisor’s performance is defective where it is not of the quality or quantity required by the contract, or not fit for the purpose required. For example, if a builder agrees to build a house but does the work negligently, so that repair work is needed to make the work done conform with the contract, the breach arises from defective performance of the contract. In order to find a true case of defective performance the promisee must receive and retain the performance. The seller in the example given above20 is guilty of nonperformance because the buyer rejected the performance when tendered. On the other hand, if the buyer ‘accepts’ the vehicle, the seller’s breach is a defective performance.
Late Performance21 [29-07] General. Breach by defective performance arguably includes breach by late performance. However, for the purposes of exposition it is convenient to deal with them separately. Where performance is tendered late, and not accepted, valid termination by the promisee (for example, because timely performance was of the essence),22 means that the promisor’s breach amounts to nonperformance. [29-08] Common law rule. The original rule at common law was that time was considered to be ‘of the essence’ of the contract unless the parties had expressed a contrary agreement. The consequence of this was that a failure by a promisor to perform at the appointed time not only meant that the promisor was liable to pay damages, but also that enforcement of the promisee’s obligations was not permitted. Timely performance was therefore a condition precedent to the promisor’s ability to enforce the promisee’s obligations. Such bald statements of the common law rule are, however, open to criticism since until about the middle of the 18th century many contractual obligations were construed as independent23 with the result that a failure to perform on time did not preclude enforcement. In truth, the common law treatment of time stipulations as essential was not established until the beginning of the 19th
century. Even then it was applied chiefly to conveyancing and mercantile transactions,24 and time was not necessarily essential in other contexts.25 [29-09] Equitable rule. The general rule in equity was that time was not essential. Therefore, a promisor’s failure to perform at the appointed time was not usually a bar to the enforcement of the contract in the equity court, although the promisor remained liable to pay damages. [page 669] Again, however, such an unqualified statement of the rule is open to criticism.26 In equity, a distinction was drawn between form and substance.27 Provided the object of the contract was still obtainable, equity would usually (but not invariably) order specific performance at the promisor’s behest. The equity court did not apply its rule in disregard of the parties’ intentions, and an express statement that time was to be of the essence of the contract was sufficient to oust the equitable rule. Nor would the rule apply if the nature of the subject matter, or the circumstances surrounding the contract, indicated that time was of the essence, for example, because of the perishable nature of the subject matter. Moreover, the intervention of the equity court was a matter of discretion. If, for example, the plaintiff was not ready and willing to perform the court might not assist the plaintiff to enforce the contract. Again, the fact that the equitable rule operated in the context of equitable claims, for specific performance or injunction, meant that it would not usually be relevant to, for example, a commercial contract for the sale of goods. Equity also recognised a procedure under which time could be made of the essence, by the promisee serving notice on the promisor, after breach on the promisor’s part, requiring performance within a specified period of time. If the promisor failed to perform within the period specified, and the court found a ‘reasonable’ time to have been allowed, the court would not usually come to the promisor’s aid. [29-10] Area of conflict. The area of conflict between the rules stated above is, obviously, where a failure to perform on time would be a good defence at common law but not in equity. For example, if a contract for the sale of land did not expressly make time of the essence, there would be a conflict between equity and common law. Thus, a purchaser in breach of contract by not tendering the purchase money on the day named for completion would be unable to enforce
the contract at common law but not necessarily barred from relief in equity. The conflict between law and equity did not concern the construction of the contract.28 The equity court did not deny that at common law time was of the essence, or that the promisor’s failure to perform constituted a breach of contract entitling the promisee to claim damages. However, acting by analogy with the principles governing relief against forfeiture,29 the court would deny the full legal effect of the promisor’s breach, that is, an inability to enforce the contract. [29-11] Position under statute. The statutory resolution of the conflict between law and equity is in favour of the equitable rule. Section 13 of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) provides:30 [page 670] Stipulations in contracts, as to time or otherwise, which would not before the commencement of this Act have been deemed to be or to have become of the essence of such contracts in a court of equity, shall receive in all courts the same construction and effect as they would have heretofore received in such court.
This provision is derived from s 25(7) of the Judicature Act 1873 (UK) and has counterparts in all Australian jurisdictions.31 Although the wording of some of these is based on s 41 of the Law of Property Act 1925 (UK) (which replaced the Judicature Act provision) they are to the same effect. Therefore, where a stipulation as to time would not be of the essence in equity it must be so treated by the court notwithstanding that, at common law, the stipulation might have been regarded as essential. [29-12] Impact of the statutory provision. Although the statutory provision is relevant to both legal and equitable proceedings,32 the scope of the provision in respect of the former has traditionally been regarded as quite narrow. The traditional view was stated as follows by Kitto J in Holland v Wiltshire:33 The qualification thus made upon the rule to be applied in the exercise of common law jurisdiction is, however, of limited application. It applies only in cases which are appropriate for the granting of equitable remedies by way of relief against the loss by a party of his contractual rights by reason of a failure on his part to perform the contract in precise accordance with its provisions as to time. This is so because only in such cases do the rules of equity treat as not of the essence of the contract stipulations which are of the essence according to the traditional view of the common law …
The provision does not operate to relieve the plaintiff from liability in damages in respect of the breach. However, one impact is to permit a plaintiff in breach to obtain damages for breach of contract. Prior to the enactment of the
provision the plaintiff would have been unable to enforce the claim by reason of the breach.34 A failure to perform a time stipulation is still a breach of contract, and in this respect the statutory provision does not alter the legal construction of the contract.35 Nor does it prevent the parties from agreeing, expressly or impliedly, that time is essential.36 Nor should it prevent the exercise of a contractual right of termination applicable to delay.37 [page 671] In United Scientific Holdings Ltd v Burnley BC38 the House of Lords appeared to take a wider view, namely, that the statutory provision is relevant to the construction of the contract and requires the court to apply a general presumption that time is not of the essence. Although this may be the position in practice, particularly in conveyancing transactions, the view was influenced by a wider interpretation of the scope of the provision than has traditionally been taken. Briefly, the facts were that certain leases provided for rent reviews. However, the leases specified dates for initiating the review procedure. The lessors failed to comply with the time stipulations but the House of Lords held that time was not of the essence. It was said that in determining whether time was of the essence the court should not go back to the old equity cases but, instead, should look to see whether there is anything in the contract to rebut the presumption that time is not essential. In the instant case there was no such indication, and the lessors’ breach did not preclude them from invoking the review procedure. However, equitable relief was not claimed by the lessors and could not have been claimed by them. The main39 difficulty created by the United Scientific case is the view, apparently expressed, that the statutory provision is relevant to all time stipulations. If the view taken in Holland v Wiltshire is applied to the facts of United Scientific, the statutory provision would not be relevant. The result would be the same because of the absence of any express or implied agreement that time was of the essence. However, the result would not be achieved by application of the statutory provision for the simple reason that no equitable remedies were relevant to the proceedings in issue. Rather, the conclusion would flow from the interpretation of the rent review provisions in accordance with general commercial principles. Therefore, although the actual decision in the case is consistent with Australian law, and indeed has been approved by the High Court,40 the reasoning is difficult to reconcile with the Australian cases. In any
event, the English courts reverted to the traditional view of the impact of the statutory provision in Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama,41 where the House of Lords held that time was of the essence of a commercial contract for the sale of goods, and treated the position as governed entirely by the parties’ agreement. Since no equitable relief was claimed, or relevant, this was the appropriate course to take. There is one other limitation on the scope of the statutory provision: it does not apply to time stipulations which state contingencies.42 Thus, if A grants to B an option to purchase real estate, and the option provides for exercise by, say, 1 March, B’s failure to exercise the option in time does not [page 672] attract the statutory provision. Various reasons have been given for this, but the fundamental reason is that the option is a species of privilege which, as was explained earlier,43 must be exercised according to its terms. There is no promise by the optionee (B) to exercise the option and no question of the optionor (A) being compensated by damages in respect of B’s failure.
Standards of Contractual Duty44 [29-13] Relevance of standard of duty. The relevance of the standard of contractual duties to breach of contract is straightforward. In order to establish a breach by failure to perform, the promisee must establish that the promisor has failed to perform a contractual obligation in accordance with the standard of duty applicable to that obligation. In cases of anticipatory breach the promisee must establish, by reference to the promisor’s words or conduct or actual position, that the promisor would have failed to perform in accordance with the applicable standard of duty.45 What then do we mean by ‘standard of duty’? In essence the concept refers to the degree of care which the promisor must exercise in performing contractual obligations.46 [29-14] Types of standards. Broadly speaking there are two types of standard: (1) a standard of absolute or strict liability; and
(2) a standard requiring the exercise of care, skill or diligence. Obviously the first imposes a higher standard of duty than the second, and is correspondingly more onerous for the promisor. [29-15] Determining the standard. The standard of duty applicable to a contractual obligation depends on the construction of the contract.47 In some cases it is possible to find express terms stating the standard of duty. For example, a sale of goods contract might provide for the seller to use its ‘best endeavours’ to obtain a licence for the export of the goods. An exclusion clause48 may achieve the same result, by providing that the promisor is liable to the promisee unless the promisor has failed to exercise ‘due diligence’. Subject to statute,49 such express terms will govern the standard of duty. Usually, however, the contract will contain no express statement of the standard of duty. The court must then decide what standard the parties impliedly agreed to.50 It is helpful to distinguish contracts under which the [page 673] promisor agrees to produce a result from contracts under which the only reasonable interpretation is that the promisor has agreed to use care to bring about a result. In this way the obligation of, say, a lessee to pay rent is distinguished from the obligation of, say, a solicitor in the conduct of a client’s litigation. The lessee’s obligation is a strict one, to see that the lessor is paid. But because a solicitor does not normally promise to win a client’s case, the standard is one of (professional) care.51 In informal contracts the standard of duty problem will usually be solved by the implication of a term.52 For example, in the absence of an express term to the contrary a court will imply a term into an employment contract requiring the exercise of ‘proper or reasonable’ care on the part of the employee.53 An implied term need not, however, impose a standard requiring the exercise of care. For example, if a contract for the hire of goods attracts an implied term requiring the goods to be fit for the hirer’s purpose, the standard of duty is strict.54 In some contracts both types of standard will be present in the terms implied. For example, terms may be implied in a building contract requiring the builder to perform the work in a good and workmanlike manner, using good quality materials reasonably fit for the purpose of the work.55 The work element is
subject to a standard of duty requiring the exercise of care, whereas the builder is strictly liable for the quality and fitness of the materials used.56 [29-16] Absolute and strict liability. Where a promisor’s standard of duty is absolute or strict the promisee makes out a prima facie case simply by proving that the performance contracted for has not been received. Since a promisor’s obligation to pay money is usually strict, the promisor cannot escape liability merely by proving that impecuniosity arose despite the exercise of care. The promisee does not need to establish want of care on the part of the promisor: a failure to perform occurs even if the promisor has used reasonable care. The strict liability standard is most common in commercial contracts,57 but it may also apply in the consumer context. For example, in Grant v Australian Knitting Mills Ltd,58 a purchaser of woollen underwear brought an action against a retailer. The court said that no question of negligence was ‘relevant to the liability in contract’ for the breach of terms implied by the sale of goods legislation.59 So far no attempt has been made to distinguish between absolute and strict liability. In fact, when courts speak of absolute liability they usually [page 674] mean strict liability. An obligation to perform can certainly be strict without being absolute. For example, a buyer’s obligation to pay for goods is strict but not absolute if it is dependent on the transfer of ownership of the goods. If it were absolute the buyer would be required to pay in any event, as is the position where the buyer promises to pay on a day certain irrespective of delivery.60 Indeed, the presumption of dependency, and the development of the doctrine of frustration, mean that there are very few absolute obligations under the modern law of contract.61 Of course, the further the performance of a contract has proceeded the more absolute a strict liability becomes. Assume, for example, that a buyer has obtained title to goods complying with the requirements of the contract, so that the seller’s side of the bargain has been performed. The range of possible excuses for the buyer is so diminished that the obligation to pay the price is, for all practical purposes, absolute in nature. [29-17] Liability for failure to exercise care. Most contracts of a personal nature, such as employment contracts, contain obligations attracting a standard requiring the exercise of care, skill or diligence.62 The nature of the ordinary
employee’s duty is that proper or reasonable care must be exercised.63 Where an element of special skill is present, as in contracts with solicitors, engineers, doctors and so on, the duty is to exercise the degree of care expected of the ‘ordinary skilled [person] exercising and professing to have that special skill’.64 It is, of course, open to a professional person to agree to a higher standard of duty.65 In all these cases the promisee establishes a breach of contract by proving that the promisor has not exercised the requisite degree of care. If there is no evidence the plaintiff will fail,66 but what the promisee must prove will depend on the facts. There is no single criterion, and the amount of evidence required will vary from contract to contract. If an element of special skill is present, evidence of practice in the industry will be a useful guide to whether the promisor has done what an ordinary skilled person exercising and professing to have that special skill would have done.67 At common law it is not conclusive that the promisor has behaved in accordance with industry practice.68 However, account must now be taken [page 675] of the civil liability legislation under which performance in accordance with industry practice may be sufficient.69 A very common type of contract, that of bailment, requires the bailee to exercise reasonable care in relation to the goods.70 However, a bailee is in a less favourable position than other promisors subject to a duty requiring the exercise of care. Where negligence, or ‘breach of bailment’ as it is sometimes termed, is alleged by a bailor, a prima facie case of breach of contract is established simply by proving that the goods have not been returned, or have been returned in a damaged condition.71 The onus then shifts to the bailee (promisor) to establish that the loss or damage occurred despite the exercise of reasonable care.
Consequences of Breach [29-18] Right to damages. The commission of a breach of contract by a promisor provides the promisee with a right to claim damages.72 Although a purely nominal sum will be awarded in the absence of proof that loss or damage
was caused by the breach, the relevance of such evidence is to the recovery of a substantial sum.73 Moreover, except in cases of anticipatory breach, the promisee need not establish termination of the performance of the contract.74 The assessment of damages for breach of contract is dealt with in Chapters 35 and 36. [29-19] No automatic termination. No matter how serious, a breach of contract does not automatically terminate its performance unless the parties have clearly expressed an intention that this is to be the result.75 The rule against automatic termination applies where the breach gives rise to a right to terminate. As will be explained,76 termination is a matter of election on the part of the promisee. This implies that a promisee entitled to terminate for breach (or repudiation) by the promisor may continue with the performance of the contract. The consequences of such an election are discussed later.77 1.
See generally [30-37]–[30-41].
2.
See generally [30-42]–[30-43].
3.
Occasionally, the expression ‘anticipatory breach’ is used to describe a failure to perform which gives rise to a right to terminate, or to describe a breach of the hybrid kind. The former is an erroneous usage and the latter somewhat confusing. See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, §§7-10–711. See further [30-30].
4.
Ogle v Comboyuro Investments Pty Ltd (1976) 136 CLR 444 at 450; 9 ALR 309.
5.
See generally Chapter 2.
6.
Cf Shepherd v Felt and Textiles of Australia Ltd (1931) 45 CLR 359 (see [11-11]).
7.
Service Station Association Ltd v Berg Bennett & Associates Pty Ltd (1993) 117 ALR 393 at 401. See also [28-09].
8.
Cf [28-09].
9.
See [28-09].
10.
See generally on good faith Chapter 2.
11.
The conduct may amount to breach of the statutory prohibition on misleading and deceptive conduct, but this is a distinct question. See generally Chapter 19. On whether a tortious liability may arise see Gimson v Victorian Workcover Authority [1995] 1 VR 209; CGU Workers Compensation (NSW) Ltd v Garcia (2007) 69 NSWLR 680; [2007] NSWCA 193.
12.
See Secretary of State for Employment v ASLEF (No 2) [1972] 2 QB 455 at 506 per Roskill LJ (‘in the law of contract, questions of intent are usually irrelevant in determining whether or not there has been a breach of contract’).
13.
[1972] 2 QB 455.
14.
[1972] 2 QB 455 at 498, 508–9.
15.
[1972] 2 QB 455 at 491–2.
16.
Commonwealth Portland Cement Co Ltd v Weber Lohmann & Co Ltd [1905] AC 66; Hobbs v
Petersham Transport Co Pty Ltd (1971) 124 CLR 220 at 230. See also [31-03] (justification of termination); [33-43] (self-induced frustration). 17.
See [13-05].
18.
For example, a shipowner may be in breach of a voyage charterparty which states the location of the vessel if the vessel was not, at the time of the contract, located as stated. See Behn v Burness (1863) 3 B & S 751; 122 ER 281.
19.
Chanter v Hopkins (1838) 4 M & W 399 at 404; 150 ER 1484 at 1486–7.
20.
See [29-05].
21.
Lindgren, Time in the Performance of Contracts, 2nd ed, 1982.
22.
See generally [30-50]–[30-53].
23.
See [28-06].
24.
See, eg Busk v Spence (1815) 4 Camp 329; 171 ER 105; Coddington v Paleologo (1867) LR 2 Ex 193.
25.
See, eg Bettini v Gye (1876) 1 QBD 183 (services contract).
26.
See S J Stoljar, ‘Untimely Performance in the Law of Contract’ (1955) 71 LQR 527 at 560–1.
27.
Parkin v Thorold (1852) 16 Beav 59; 51 ER 698.
28.
Tilley v Thomas (1867) LR 3 Ch App 61 at 67.
29.
Seton v Slade (1802) 7 Ves Jun 265 at 273–4; 32 ER 108 at 111.
30.
The reference to time being ‘deemed … to have become’ of the essence is a reference to the notice procedure referred to in [29-09] and discussed [30-59]–[30-64].
31.
ACT: Civil Law (Property) Act 2006, s 501; NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 65; Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 62; SA: Law of Property Act 1936, s 16; Tas: Supreme Court Civil Procedure Act 1932, s 11(7); Vic: Property Law Act 1958, s 41; WA: Property Law Act 1969, s 21.
32.
Canning v Temby (1905) 3 CLR 419 at 426.
33.
(1954) 90 CLR 409 at 418–19. See also Stickney v Keeble [1915] AC 386 at 417; Citicorp Australia Ltd v Hendry (1985) 4 NSWLR 22 at 27; G R Mailman & Associates Pty Ltd v Wormald (Aust) Pty Ltd (1991) 24 NSWLR 80 at 99.
34.
Howe v Smith (1884) 27 Ch D 89 at 103; Stickney v Keeble [1915] AC 386 at 404.
35.
Canning v Temby (1905) 3 CLR 419 at 426; Raineri v Miles [1981] AC 1050; Louinder v Leis (1982) 149 CLR 509; 41 ALR 187.
36.
See [30-50]–[30-53].
37.
Surprisingly, in Hewitt v Debus (2004) 59 NSWLR 617 (see Elizabeth Stone (2004) 20 JCL 255; J W Carter (2004) 78 ALJ 632) the court held otherwise.
38.
[1978] AC 904. See also Amherst v James Walker Goldsmith & Silversmith Ltd [1983] Ch 305.
39.
For discussion see P V Baker, ‘The Future of Equity’ (1977) 93 LQR 530; Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, § 5-47.
40.
Gollin & Co Ltd v Karenlee Nominees Pty Ltd (1983) 153 CLR 455; 49 ALR 135.
41.
[1981] 1 WLR 711 (see [30-52]).
42.
See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, § 5-49. Rent review clauses give rise to particular problems. See G R Mailman & Associates Pty Ltd v Wormald (Aust) Pty Ltd (1991) 24 NSWLR 80 (see Diane Skapinker and J W Carter (1992) 5 JCL 136); Starmark Enterprises Ltd v CPL
Distribution Ltd [2002] Ch 306 (see J W Carter and Diane Skapinker (2003) 19 JCL 84). 43.
[28-37].
44.
See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, ch 2.
45.
See further [30-35].
46.
This is the second aspect of the ‘fundamental question’ stated by Dixon and Fullagar JJ in McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission (1951) 84 CLR 377 at 407–8 (see [28-01]).
47.
McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission (1951) 84 CLR 377 at 407.
48.
See generally [14-01]–[14-25].
49.
See [14-22], [24-20]–[24-31].
50.
See [12-03].
51.
See Heydon v NRMA Ltd (2000) 51 NSWLR 1 at 53, 117; Carew Counsel Pty Ltd v French (2002) 4 VR 172 at 185; 190 ALR 690.
52.
See, eg Lloyd v Citicorp Australia Ltd (1986) 11 NSWLR 286. Cf Hawkins v Clayton (1988) 164 CLR 539; 78 ALR 69.
53.
Lister v Romford Ice and Cold Storage Co Ltd [1957] AC 555.
54.
Derbyshire Building Co Pty Ltd v Becker (1962) 107 CLR 633.
55.
See [11-14].
56.
Reg Glass Pty Ltd v Rivers Locking Systems Pty Ltd (1968) 120 CLR 516.
57.
There is support for a movement towards the lesser standard. See Lord Devlin, ‘The Treatment of Breach of Contract’ [1966] CLJ 192 at 209. Cf Pagnan SpA v Tradax Ocean Transportation SA [1987] 3 All ER 565 (see David Yates and J W Carter (1988) 1 JCL 57).
58.
[1936] AC 85.
59.
[1936] AC 85 at 100. Contrast the position of the manufacturer sued in tort.
60.
See [28-06].
61.
See [33-03].
62.
The result, in cases of proved breach, will be for the promisor to be subject to concurrent liabilities in tort and contract; see, eg Pullen v Gutteridge Haskins & Davey Pty Ltd [1993] 1 VR 27 at 39; Breen v Williams (1996) 186 CLR 71; 138 ALR 259; Astley v Austrust Ltd (1999) 197 CLR 1; 161 ALR 155. See also [11-16].
63.
See [29-15].
64.
Bolam v Friern Hospital Management Committee [1957] 1 WLR 582 at 586 (the case was disapproved on another ground in Rogers v Whitaker (1992) 175 CLR 479; 109 ALR 625). See also [11-23].
65.
See, eg Greaves & Co (Contractors) Ltd v Baynham Meikle & Partners [1975] 1 WLR 1095 at 1100– 1.
66.
Max Garrett (Distributors) Pty Ltd v Tobias (1975) 50 ALJR 402.
67.
Fanhaven Pty Ltd v Bain Dawes Northern Pty Ltd [1982] 2 NSWLR 57 at 63.
68.
See Rogers v Whitaker (1992) 175 CLR 479. See also Naxakis v Western General Hospital (1999) 197 CLR 269 at 275–6; 162 ALR 540; Erwin v Iveco Trucks Australia Ltd (2010) 267 ALR 752 at 773; [2010] NSWCA 113 at [87].
69.
See eg Civil Liability Act 2002 (NSW), s 5O. And see Barbara McDonald and J W Carter, ‘The
Lottery of Contractual Risk Allocation and Proportionate Liability’ (2009) 26 JCL 1. 70.
See Palmer, Palmer on Bailment, 3rd ed, §§1-048ff.
71.
See Hobbs v Petersham Transport Co Pty Ltd (1971) 124 CLR 220 at 233, 240.
72.
See [35-01].
73.
See [35-06].
74.
See [35-02].
75.
See [31-01].
76.
See [31-02].
77.
See [31-05] and [37-18]–[37-24].
[page 677]
PART VIII
Termination for Breach
[page 679]
Chapter 30
Termination for Breach [30-01] Nature of the right to terminate. The right to terminate, which flows from some breaches of contract and a repudiation of obligation, is a right to terminate the obligation of the parties to perform their contractual duties.1 After termination the parties are discharged from the obligation to perform (or to be ready and willing to perform) their respective contractual duties.2 Whether a right to terminate exists is an issue of law. [30-02] Onus of proof. The onus of proving the existence and exercise of a right to terminate for breach or repudiation rests on the party who claims that the right existed or has been exercised.3 That party is usually described as the promisee, the ‘innocent’ party or the ‘party not in breach’.
General Matters Introduction [30-03] Relevant situations. The basic distinction is between a right to terminate expressly conferred by the contract (‘contractual’ right to terminate), and a right to terminate which is conferred by law (‘implied’ right to terminate). The concept of a right conferred by law embraces both a right of termination conferred by a common law and one conferred by statute. We are mainly concerned with the former. There are three situations in which the right will be implied, unless the parties have agreed otherwise: for breach of condition; for a sufficiently serious breach of an intermediate term; and
in respect of an absence of readiness or willingness to perform constituting a repudiation or capable of being treated as an anticipatory breach of contract. In any given fact situation the right to terminate may be available on more than one ground. For example, breach of an intermediate term may amount to a repudiation. [page 680] It is analytically convenient to deal separately with the situations in which a right to terminate arises from delay in performance.4 [30-04] Generally no right to rescind. A right to rescind the contract ab initio (from the beginning) is distinguishable from a right to terminate the performance of the contract in futuro.5 Generally, the existence of a breach of contract does not confer on the promisee a right to rescind the contract.6 Although there is some support for the view that a right to rescind is conferred by the common law in cases of repudiation resulting from an express refusal to perform,7 this seems anomalous and the cases may need to be reconsidered. However, the contract,8 or a statutory provision may expressly confer a right to rescind for breach. But the use of the word ‘rescind’ is not conclusive as it is frequently used as a synonym for ‘terminate’.9
Terminology [30-05] Contractual terms. The various types of contractual terms were described earlier.10 For the purpose of the right to terminate, only those terms which state promises or undertakings are relevant and, in particular, terms which are conditions or intermediate in character. [30-06] Repudiation and anticipatory breach. The expressions ‘repudiation’ and ‘anticipatory breach’ are used in various senses.11 For the purpose of the right to terminate, ‘repudiation’ means ‘repudiation of obligation’ and describes a situation in which a promisor’s absence of readiness or willingness to perform gives rise to a right to terminate. The expression ‘anticipatory breach’ also concentrates on the absence of readiness or willingness to perform. Generally, the expression is restricted to an absence of readiness or willingness preceding the time for performance by the
promisor which can be treated as a ground for termination by the promisee.12 For example, a repudiation which precedes the time of performance may be ‘accepted’ by the promisee as an anticipatory breach. The concept of anticipatory breach is therefore part of the wider concept of repudiation.13 [page 681] [30-07] Fundamental and total breach. The concepts of ‘fundamental’ and ‘total’ breach were considered earlier in the context of exclusion clauses.14 Either type of breach will give rise to a right to terminate. The expression ‘fundamental breach’ is usually used to describe the type of breach which must be established where the promisee is relying on the breach of an intermediate term.15 The expression has also been used to describe the type of breach which the promisee must establish under the anticipatory breach concept,16 or to describe a failure to comply with a notice served after delay in performance.17 Sometimes, but unhelpfully, it is used as a general description of any breach which gives rise to a right to terminate.18 [30-08] Repudiatory breach. The phrase ‘repudiatory breach’ is often employed to describe any breach which gives rise to a right to terminate the performance of a contract, on the basis that any such breach may be treated by the promisee as a repudiation of the whole contract.19 It is difficult, however, to describe every breach of condition as ‘repudiatory’ in any objective sense and a repudiation of obligation may not of itself amount to a breach of contract, because it precedes the time of performance.
Breach of a Term20 Contractual and Statutory Rights [30-09] Contractual rights. Whether a contract expressly confers a right to terminate for breach depends, of course, on the construction of the contract. Whether the right can be exercised in the circumstances which have occurred also depends on the construction of the express term. Generally, construction is also the basis upon which it is determined whether the promisee has exercised
the right according to its terms.21 A right to terminate may be general, and arise on a breach of any term of the contract, or specific, and arise only on the breach of a particular term or a particular kind of breach.22 Sometimes it is difficult to classify the right, but the court must do its best to arrive at an interpretation which corresponds with the parties’ intentions.23 Since rights must be exercised according to their terms, if the right is to come into operation at a particular time, the right cannot be exercised in [page 682] advance by the promisee.24 Similarly, a party may not act on the clause prior to the expiry of the notice given under it.25 On the other hand, the mere existence of a contractual right, not applicable to the circumstances which have occurred, generally does not preclude reliance on a common law right, such as the right to terminate for repudiation, which is applicable.26 [30-10] Statutory rights. No Australian statute confers a general right to terminate for breach or repudiation. There are, however, statutes which confer the right to terminate in specified situations. Generally, these acknowledge rights which would be conferred by the common law. Thus, the sale of goods legislation confers a right to terminate for breach of condition in a contract for the sale of goods and in respect of the repudiation of a contract for the sale of goods by instalments.27 There is a more sophisticated statutory regime in the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods 1980 which, although using some of the terminology of the common law, does not revolve around the distinction between conditions and warranties.28 Although it is convenient to term these rights of termination ‘statutory’ rights, exercise of the right by the promisee is in fact the exercise of an implied contractual right. Therefore, unless the statute prohibits its exclusion,29 the parties may agree that the right is not to be available.
Breach of Condition30 [30-11] Types of conditions. Conditions have been classified in two main ways. The first classification depends on whether a breach of the term is likely to cause
serious loss or detriment to the promisee. If every breach of a term is likely to be serious it will generally be a condition.31 But if some breaches will probably not be serious the term is less likely to be construed as a condition. However, a term may be a condition even though its breach is not likely to be a serious matter for the promisee. In the latter case the term is a condition if the parties have accounted the breach a serious matter, either by an express agreement,32 or by reason of an implied agreement between the parties that the term is to be so treated. [page 683] The second classification distinguishes cases in which precise or literal compliance with the term is essential from cases in which substantial performance is essential. The importance of the distinction was explained by Jordan CJ in Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd v Luna Park (NSW) Ltd:33 If the innocent party would not have entered into the contract unless assured of a strict and literal performance of the promise, he may in general treat himself as discharged upon any breach of the promise, however slight. If he contracted in reliance upon a substantial performance of the promise, any substantial breach will ordinarily justify a discharge.
However, if the definition of condition stated in the sale of goods legislation34 is accepted as a general definition, the second class of conditions referred to by Jordan CJ should now be described as intermediate terms. This is certainly the effect of decisions applying Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd.35 But the matter is one of terminology, not substance.
Express agreement [30-12] Ways of indicating express agreement. Perhaps surprisingly, it is difficult to find words which will expressly make a term a condition. The expression ‘time is of the essence of this contract’ is effective to make the time stipulations conditions.36 But the mere use of the word ‘condition’ is not conclusive, due to its inherent ambiguity. For example, in L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd,37 a term in a distributorship agreement made visits by Wickman to Schuler’s clients a ‘condition’ of the contract. Schuler argued that as the term was a condition any breach by Wickman would give rise to a right to terminate the performance of the contract. The House of Lords
rejected the argument: the use of so ambiguous a word as ‘condition’ was not conclusive, and when regard was had to the other terms of the contract it was clear that the term in issue was intermediate in character. The decision in Schuler v Wickman does not mean that the parties can only establish an express agreement by expressly providing that every breach of the term is to give rise to a right to terminate. Nevertheless, given the ambiguity of the word, the only sure way to express agreement is to state the consequence which is to flow. Indeed, if the consequence — a right to terminate in respect of any breach — is expressly stated, the word ‘condition’ need not be used by the parties. Moreover, since the effect of such a provision is the conferral of a contractual right to terminate, the [page 684] character of the term becomes irrelevant to the promisee’s right to terminate.38
Implied agreement [30-13] Establishing an implied agreement. Most terms which are conditions are so classified on the basis of an implied agreement between the parties. The concept of ‘implied agreement’ refers to an inference of the parties’ intention which is based on construction of the contract in the light of the case law. Assuming that the contract is in writing, and that the parol evidence rule39 applies, the court cannot have regard to the prior negotiations of the parties, or their subsequent conduct, when deciding the issue. This means, for example, that the seriousness of an established breach of the term in question cannot be used as a basis for saying that the term was, or was not, a condition.40 Again, the fact that the parties, when performing the contract, did not treat the term as a condition cannot be used as a guide on construction,41 although it may be significant for another purpose, such as establishing an election to continue performance or estoppel.42 [30-14] Prior decisions. Where a standard form contract is in issue, such as the New South Wales Law Society’s Standard Conditions of Sale, the New York Produce Exchange time charterparty, or one of the many GAFTA forms frequently encountered in English commodity contract cases, it may be
important to know whether the term alleged to be a condition has been the subject of a prior decision. If the term has been interpreted, the parties are presumed to have agreed to be bound by the prior decision unless they have expressly agreed to a contrary result. Moreover, if a term has been the subject of an authoritative interpretation by the High Court the decision will bind the lower courts and, in the absence of a contrary agreement between them, be conclusive between the parties. It is not, however, necessary for a term to be precisely the same as one which has been the subject of a prior decision. If the term is similar the court may feel bound, in the interests of uniformity of decision, to construe the term in accordance with the earlier decision. For example, in Maredelanto Compania Naviera SA v Bergbau-Handel GmbH (The Mihalis Angelos),43 an expected ready to load clause in a charterparty was construed as a condition because it had been interpreted as such in earlier sale of goods cases. [30-15] Motivation for entry into contract. Jordan CJ stated the following test in Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd v Luna Park (NSW) Ltd:44 [page 685] The test of essentiality is whether it appears from the general nature of the contract considered as a whole, or from some particular term or terms, that the promise is of such importance to the promisee that he would not have entered into the contract unless he had been assured of a strict or a substantial performance of the promise, as the case may be, and that this ought to have been apparent to the promisor …
Although the Full Court’s decision in the Tramways case was reversed on appeal,45 Jordan CJ’s statement was approved and applied by the High Court in Associated Newspapers Ltd v Bancks.46 Bancks agreed to prepare and furnish weekly a full page drawing which Associated Newspapers promised to publish on the front page of the comic section of their newspaper. Their breach of this obligation was held to constitute a breach of condition. The term was so construed because it must have been apparent to Associated Newspapers that Bancks would not have entered into the contract unless assured of a strict or at least a substantial compliance with the term. On the facts a substantial breach was established as Associated Newspapers committed three successive breaches of their promise. Because the prior negotiations of the parties are not usually admissible as evidence on the construction of a contract, a promisee cannot rely on such
negotiations when seeking to establish the motivation for entry into the contract. Jordan CJ’s test is therefore objective.47 For example, where a contract for the sale of land specifies that a deposit must be paid on entry into the contract, the term will usually be construed as a condition48 because a deposit payment is so important that a vendor would not be prepared to enter into the contract without an assurance that the payment will be made strictly in accordance with the contract. If there is nothing to indicate that the promisee’s entry was motivated by an assurance of strict (or substantial) compliance,49 the term cannot be construed as a condition in reliance on the test. However, this does not necessarily mean that the term will not be a condition since there are other factors to be considered. In other words, although satisfaction of the test stated by Jordan CJ is sufficient, it may not be necessary, provided there is some other basis for saying that the term was intended to be a condition. [30-16] Structure of term and contract. Where a term states the promisor’s obligation in clear and precise words it is more likely to be a condition than a term couched in general words. Thus, in Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd50 a contract under which [page 686] advertisements were to be displayed on boards placed on Sydney trams contained a promise by the advertisers in the following terms: ‘We guarantee that these boards will be on the tracks at least eight hours per day throughout your season’. The fact that the parties had chosen words of guarantee, and also stated a definite time duration, were good indications that the term in question was a condition, even though this construction imposed a very onerous obligation on the advertisers. When the advertisers breached the term the High Court held that the promisees were entitled to terminate the performance of the contract. The term in issue must, however, be construed as a whole, and even a promise expressed in definite terms may not be construed as a condition if it expressly confers a right on either or both parties to terminate in defined circumstances which is inconsistent with the existence of a right in respect of any breach of the term.51 The structure of the contract may be relevant to the issue, and there is obviously a need to construe the whole contract when considering whether a
particular term is a condition. For example, one reason for saying that the term considered in L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd52 was not intended to be a condition was that another term of the distributorship agreement conferred a right to terminate in the event of a ‘material’ breach of the contract not being remedied within a certain time. Although the presence of a contractual right does not necessarily prevent another term being a condition, in Schuler v Wickman the House of Lords took the view that the presence of the express provision was a good indication that the parties did not intend that every breach by Wickman of its obligation to make weekly visits to Schuler’s client would give rise to a right to terminate independently of the procedure which the parties had laid down. Construction of the whole contract may indicate an interrelation between the obligations of the parties. Thus, in Associated Newspapers Ltd v Bancks,53 the court considered that Bancks’s obligation to furnish the drawing was a condition, and since there was a direct relation between his obligation and the obligation of Associated Newspapers to publish the drawing in the way described, it was logical to construe the latter obligation as a condition as well. [30-17] Likely consequences of breach. In Bettini v Gye54 the court applied, as a test for determining whether a term is a condition, whether the term ‘goes to the root of the matter’, on the basis that a ‘failure to perform it would render the performance of the rest of the contract by the plaintiff a thing different in substance from what the defendant has stipulated for’. Similarly, in Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd,55 Diplock LJ said that a term will be a condition if it can be said that every breach of the term will give rise to an ‘event which will deprive [page 687] the party not in default of substantially the whole benefit which it was intended that he should obtain from the contract’. Under these formulations, the fact that the breach of a term will give rise to serious consequences for the promisee is a good indication that the parties must have intended the term to be a condition. On the other hand, where a term can be breached in various ways, some of which will have serious consequences and others only minor effects on the performance of the contract, the term is not likely to be a condition.56 Thus, in Cehave NV v Bremer Handelsgesellschaft
mbH (The Hansa Nord),57 a term stating that goods the subject of a sale of goods contract would be shipped ‘in good condition’ by the seller was not a condition because of the range of possible breaches of the term. Two important points need to be made about the seriousness of breach consideration. First, regard cannot be had to the actual breach which has occurred because that would be to construe the contract in the light of subsequent events. Thus, regard should be had not to the ‘effect of the breach which has in fact taken place; but the effect likely to be produced … by any such breach’58 of the term. Second, although it is sufficient for serious consequences to be found as the likely effect of the breach, it is not essential, in order for a term to be a condition, that every breach must produce substantial loss or detriment.59 Other factors must be considered, and a term may be a condition, particularly in a commercial contract, even though its breach is not likely to cause substantial loss or detriment to the promisee. [30-18] Assessment of damages and reasonableness of result.60 If damages would be an adequate remedy for the promisee in respect of a breach of the term alleged to be a condition then this is an indication that the term was not intended to be a condition,61 on the basis that the promisee is adequately protected from the consequences of the promisor’s breach without being accorded the right to terminate performance. On the other hand, if damages would not be an adequate remedy, for example, because their assessment would be extremely difficult, this is an indication that the term was intended to be a condition. For example, in Ankar Pty Ltd v National Westminster Finance (Australia) Ltd62 a security deposit agreement secured the obligations of a lessee under a goods lease. Two terms required the promisor to notify the promisee of defaults by the lessee, and to consult with the promisee with a view to determining the appropriate course of action to take when defaults occurred. The High Court construed both terms as conditions, partly on the ground that the [page 688] promisee would not be adequately protected from the consequences of breach by an award of damages. Where construing a term as a condition would achieve an unreasonable result the court will presume that the parties did not intend that construction to be placed on the contract.63 For example, in Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v
Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd,64 Upjohn LJ said that it would have been ‘contrary to common sense’ to construe the seaworthiness term as a condition. Of course, the court does not have a discretion to construe contracts reasonably. Therefore, if the parties have sufficiently indicated their intention that the term is to be construed as a condition the court cannot reject that construction merely because it produces what is, objectively, an unreasonable result. [30-19] Nature of the term, subject matter and contract. It is always important to consider the nature of the term alleged to be a condition, and the subject matter of the contract. Some terms have, over the years, achieved a particular status. For example, terms dealing with documentary credits,65 and also time stipulations,66 to some extent at least, attract special rules. Other types of terms may be conditions because of their intrinsic importance. For example, terms relating to a perishable subject matter67 are more likely to be regarded as conditions than those dealing with permanent subject matter such as land. Generally, terms descriptive of the subject matter of a contract are usually construed as conditions.68 However, there is now a tendency to adopt a more discerning approach to descriptive terms, and to treat such terms as conditions only where an item in the description of the subject matter constitutes a ‘substantial ingredient’ of the ‘identity’ of the subject matter.69 On the other hand, if a term is essentially procedural in character it will be difficult to establish that the term is a condition in the absence of some special factor.70 In Bentsen v Taylor Sons & Co (No 2)71 Bowen LJ said72 that there is ‘no way of deciding’ whether a term is a condition: except by looking at the contract in the light of the surrounding circumstances, and then making up one’s mind whether the intention of the parties, as gathered from the instrument itself, will best be carried out by treating the promise as a warranty sounding only in damages, or as a condition precedent by the failure to perform which the other party is relieved of his liability.
[page 689] Recent decisions have relied on this statement to justify construing important terms in commercial contracts as conditions, on the basis of a need for certainty.73 Although this assists in ensuring that parties know their positions without first going to court for a ruling on the construction of the contract, the emphasis is by no means a recent development. For example, in Bowes v Chaleyer74 Starke J said that the court is not in as good a position as the parties
to a commercial contract when the ‘value and importance’ of a term must be estimated. He put forward the view that it is ‘far safer … to treat as conditions substantial and important provisions in a mercantile contract relating to the time, place or mode of shipment of goods’ the subject of the contract ‘unless the contrary intention is manifest’.
Implied terms [30-20] Statutory classification. As was explained earlier,75 where a statute implies a term into a contract it will almost invariably classify that term. If the term is classified as a condition the term will be so construed unless the parties have expressed an agreement that the term is to be classified in another way, for example, as a warranty. However, where the contract is made with a consumer the ability of the parties to re-classify the term may be restricted, if not altogether prohibited, by the statute.76 [30-21] Express and implied agreement. Where a term is implied at common law, the character of the term depends on the construction of the contract and the term may be a condition as a result of express or implied agreement. Having regard to the difficulties encountered in making express terms conditions, cases in which an implied term is a condition by reason of express agreement are rare indeed. Probably the only situation in which an express agreement is likely to extend to an implied term is where a general agreement, created by words such as ‘time shall be of the essence of this contract’ is found. Even then the question may be raised whether the agreement was intended to extend to implied terms as well as express terms. Usually, if an implied term is a condition this will be because of the implied agreement of the parties. In deciding whether this is the case the court will have regard to considerations similar to those referred to above. For example, in Shepherd v Felt and Textiles of Australia Ltd77 the High Court implied a term into an agency contract requiring the agent to render faithful service to his principal and construed the term as a condition, on the basis that the breach of such a term was likely to have serious [page 690]
consequences for the principal, for example, by damaging his commercial reputation, and because faithful service is important to the relation of confidence which must exist between principal and agent.
Breach of Intermediate Term78 Terms which are intermediate in character [30-22] Express terms. Cases such as Cehave NV v Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH (The Hansa Nord)79 justify the general proposition that if an express term is not intended to be a condition it will be presumed to be intermediate in character, and construed as such unless the parties have clearly expressed an intention that the term is a warranty. This is particularly true if the term is capable of being breached in various ways. Nevertheless, in the final analysis the issue must be decided by reference to the express or implied agreement of the parties. An express agreement may be found even though the parties have not used the intermediate term terminology. For example, if the parties have expressed agreement that a particular type of breach, such as a ‘serious’, ‘substantial’ or ‘material’ breach is to give rise to a right to terminate, the term is intermediate in character. More commonly, intermediate terms result from implied agreement: on the basis of the presumption explained above; because of the presence of an exclusion clause which restricts the right to terminate to particular types of breach;80 or because the parties have not expressed an intention to depart from the construction previously adopted in a standard form contract.81 As was explained earlier,82 where a term is intermediate in character not every breach of the term will give rise to a right to terminate. The breach must be ‘sufficiently serious’83 before the right will accrue to the promisee. [30-23] Implied terms. An implied term may be intermediate in character. The implied term commonly found in employment contracts, requiring the employee to exercise proper or reasonable care in the performance of duties,84 must usually be intermediate because it can be breached in various ways. There are no examples of intermediate terms implied by statute.
[page 691]
Degree of seriousness required [30-24] Express provision. If a term is intermediate, and the parties have specified the type of breach which is to be regarded as sufficiently serious to give rise to a right to terminate, then the express provision governs the promisee’s right to terminate. For example, if the contract provides that a ‘material’ breach is to give rise to a right to terminate, the court must decide whether the breach which has occurred is ‘material’ within the meaning of the contract.85 However, strictly speaking, if the parties have expressly conferred the right to terminate for a material breach the occurrence of such a breach activates an express contractual right rather than an implied right. [30-25] Criterion at common law. The criterion to be applied at common law has been stated in various ways, such as by requiring the breach to go to the ‘root’86 of the contract, or to be ‘fundamental’87 in character. The actual description does not matter so long as the following points are taken into account. First, the seriousness of the breach depends not only on the breach itself but also on the consequences of the breach, both actual and foreseeable, for the promisee.88 Second, it is the effect of the breach on the contract as a whole which matters: due to the promisor’s breach the performance of the contract must be substantially different from that intended by the parties. Third, the assessment of the consequences of the breach is essentially a factual matter on which opinions are likely to differ. Fourth, there is a link with the doctrine of frustration in that, in commercial contracts at least, the degree of seriousness required is the same as that applied under the doctrine of frustration.89 This is why, in Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd,90 the English Court of Appeal adopted the criterion of commercial frustration in the context of breach. Because the ‘frustrating’ event is caused by the promisor’s breach of contract, the distinguishing features are: that the promisor is liable in damages; and that the contract is not automatically discharged.91
[page 692]
Actual and foreseeable consequences [30-26] Actual consequences. In cases where the promisee relies on the actual consequence of the breach to establish substantially different performance, the court will concentrate on the detriment actually suffered by the promisee as a consequence of the breach. The promisee must establish deprivation of ‘substantially the whole benefit which it was the intention of the parties as expressed in the contract that he should obtain as the consideration’92 for the performance of the promisee’s own obligations. For example, where the contract relates to a specific subject matter the breach is sufficiently serious if the promisor delivers something which is, in substance, a thing different from that contracted for.93 Other situations in which the promisee may be regarded as having been deprived of substantially the whole benefit of the contract include: the breach deprives the promisee of the profit which was expected from performance of the contract;94 performance is so defective that damages would not be adequate compensation in respect of loss caused by the promisor’s breach, for example, because the performance has no value at all;95 the breach will substantially injure professional or commercial reputation;96 where substantial expenditure would be required to make the performance rendered by the promisor conform with the requirements of the contract;97 where the promisee’s burden of performance is substantially increased by the promisor’s breach.98 In Koompahtoo Local Aboriginal Land Council v Sanpine Pty Ltd99 the High Court held that a developer had committed a sufficiently serious breach of a joint venture agreement to develop and sell certain land. Koompahtoo was a Local Aboriginal Land Council. It agreed to provide the land. The other joint venture party was Sanpine. It possessed the expertise necessary to develop the land and agreed to manage the development. However, Sanpine breached several obligations in significant [page 693]
respects. For example, there were no meaningful joint venture accounts, and the records of Sanpine did not explain or justify significant amounts claimed as expenses chargeable to the joint venture. Indeed, there were regular and systematic breaches of the joint venture agreement.100 These made it impossible for Koompahtoo to assess the joint venture’s financial position. Even if none of the terms breached were conditions, they were at least intermediate terms. Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Heydon and Crennan JJ said101 that the breaches of Sanpine were frequent and repeated, and that ‘their consequences were serious’. It was held that the breaches and their consequences were so serious that they deprived Koompahtoo of a substantial part of the benefit for which it contracted.102 Koompahtoo’s termination of the joint venture agreement was therefore valid. In many cases detailed examination of the facts will be required to establish whether performance is in fact substantially different from that intended by the parties. For example, in Cehave NV v Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH (The Hansa Nord)103 buyers of citrus pulp pellets on terms CIF Rotterdam sought to justify their rejection of the goods on the ground that the sellers had breached a term requiring the shipment to be made ‘in good condition’. Some 3400 tonnes of pellets were in dispute and on arrival in Rotterdam 1300 tonnes were found to have been substantially affected by heat. Minor damage (between two and five per cent) had occurred to the remainder, and the entire shipment had been resold by the sellers for only £33,700. Although the contract price for the goods had been about £100,000 the court found that the sellers’ breach was not sufficiently serious. The diminution in value of the goods could be explained, not only on the basis that the sellers had breached the contract but also on the ground that the market price of sound goods had fallen, and that the goods in question had been resold in suspicious circumstances, for less than their true value. It transpired that the damaged condition of the goods did not prevent them being used as an ingredient in the manufacture of cattle feed, a purpose not substantially different from that intended by the buyers, namely, animal feed. When all these factors are taken into account the court’s decision seems justified. However, it also indicates that a very serious breach is required. [30-27] Foreseeable consequences. Even if the actual consequences of the breach of an intermediate term are not sufficiently serious, the promisee may be able to establish a right to terminate by reference to the foreseeable consequences of the breach.104 Moreover, a promisee is permitted to combine actual and foreseeable consequences, and the promisor’s breach may, in some cases, achieve the significance required
[page 694] only as the result of the combined consequences. The promisee must, however, establish that any foreseeable consequences relied on were reasonably foreseeable at the time of termination.105 In considering the effect of foreseeable consequences it is important to have regard to the types of consequences which are reasonably foreseeable. If the breach is likely to cause physical injury to the promisee, for example, because a repairer has negligently repaired a motor vehicle so that it is dangerous to drive, then the consequences can be regarded as serious.106 On the other hand, if the only likely consequence is delay, there is clearly a need to consider not only the period of delay but also its effect on the object of the contract.107 It may also be relevant to consider the conduct of the promisor if informed of the breach. A promisor who is informed of the consequences which are likely to occur as the result of the breach may offer to remedy its breach, for example, by doing repair work again.108 The promisor’s offer is relevant to the consequences of the breach, because, assuming the offer to be genuine and feasible, it may operate to remove the element of foreseeable loss or damage. A promisee is not obliged to terminate in respect of foreseeable events, and does not necessarily lose the right to terminate merely by waiting for them to occur. The promisee may, however, find that the foreseeable consequences do not occur. If that is the position the promisee will cease to be entitled to terminate. Of course, even if the reason for their nonoccurrence is the fact that the promisor has remedied the breach, the promisee may claim damages for breach of contract.109 However, in exceptional cases the right to terminate may be lost by waiting on events, for example, because the delay amounts to an election to continue performance. But since election depends on knowledge of the circumstances a party who does not know of the consequences which were likely to have resulted can hardly be denied the right to rely on consequences which do occur.110 [page 695]
Repudiation of the Contract111
General112 [30-28] Focus of the repudiation concept. The focus of the concept of repudiation of obligation is on the readiness and willingness of a promisor to perform contractual obligations. If the promisor is not ready and willing, or will not, at the appointed time, be ready and willing to perform, the law treats the promisee as possessing the right to terminate the performance of the contract under the doctrine of repudiation, provided that the absence of readiness or willingness satisfies a requirement of seriousness. The focal point of the repudiation concept distinguishes it from termination for breach, where the focus is on the promisor’s breach and its consequences. However, there is considerable overlap between the two bases for termination because an absence of readiness or willingness may manifest itself in a breach of contract. An anticipatory breach of contract occurs if a repudiation and exercise of the right of termination take place prior to the time appointed for performance by the promisor. [30-29] Readiness and willingness. The following features of the concept of readiness and willingness may be noted. First, the concept includes an ability to perform. Thus, a promisor is ready and willing to perform only if ready, willing and able to perform.113 Second, whether a promisor is ready and willing to perform is a question of fact.114 Third, since a promisor must be both ready and willing to perform, an absence of either (or ability) may amount to a repudiation. Fourth, the extent of readiness and willingness required is determined by the terms of the contract. Therefore, a promisor must be ready and willing to perform in accordance with the standard of contractual duty imposed by the contract115 at the time when performance is due. Fifth, although a promisor need not be ready and willing to perform until performance is due, the striking feature of the doctrines of repudiation and anticipatory breach is that they permit a promisee to terminate on the basis of an anticipated absence of readiness or willingness. Sixth, a plaintiff (or defendant) is not obliged to plead expressly readiness and
willingness to perform, this being implied by rules of court.116 Accordingly, if one party wishes to contest the readiness or [page 696] willingness of the other, that party must expressly do so in order to oblige the other party to produce evidence of readiness and willingness to perform.117 Seventh, proof that a promisor was not ready and willing to perform at the time when performance was due will generally be sufficient proof of a breach of contract by failure to perform. However, proof that a promisor will not be ready and willing when performance falls due is not sufficient proof of an anticipatory breach. As explained below,118 two further elements must be established: a right to terminate the performance of the contract; and an election to terminate on the part of the promisee. [30-30] Anticipatory breach.119 The expression ‘repudiation of obligation’ includes words or conduct which can be treated by a promisor as an anticipatory breach. For the breach to be anticipatory in character there must be a prospective element.120 The clearest case of this is where a promisor repudiates obligations at a time which precedes the earliest date for performance on the promisor’s part, as where a seller, obliged to deliver by 1 March, repudiates on 1 February. It is nevertheless fairly common for a breach to be described as anticipatory even though performance by the promisor has commenced, and notwithstanding that he or she may have committed an actual breach by failure to perform.121 For an anticipatory breach to occur the promisee must terminate the performance of the contract,122 and a repudiation, standing alone, does not have this effect.123 Because of the requirement of termination (termed ‘acceptance’), it is not, strictly speaking, correct to describe a repudiation as itself an anticipatory breach of contract.124 Where the promisee’s right to terminate is based on an inability to perform, the promisor may not, in fact, be repudiating his or her obligations. However, because the concept of readiness and willingness embraces an ability to perform, it is appropriate to deal with inability under the heading of ‘repudiation’. [30-31] Ways of proving repudiation. There are two ways of establishing repudiation:
(1) by reference to the promisor’s words and conduct; and [page 697] (2) by reference to the promisor’s actual position. When relying on (2), the existence of repudiation depends on the promisor in fact being unable to perform, although, as we shall see, the words or conduct of the promisor may also have relevance to inability. The distinction between the two ways of proving repudiation is important because the law permits the promisee to terminate in respect of words or conduct amounting to repudiation even if the promisor is in fact able to perform. Thus, when relying on (1), the promisee is not required to prove that the promisor was in fact unable to perform. Obviously, the first mode of proof is more appealing to the promisee, but in each case the promisee must establish that the absence of readiness or willingness is, or will be, a serious matter. [30-32] The requirement of seriousness. Superficially the requirement of seriousness is extremely straightforward: the promisee must prove either:125 that the absence of readiness or willingness relied on extends to all the promisor’s obligations;126 or that it clearly indicates that the promisor will breach the contract in a way which gives rise to a right to terminate for breach.127 In the first situation the only difficulty likely to confront the promisee is the relevance, in some cases, of the bona fides of the promisor. But in the second situation further difficulties are likely to be encountered. First, there may be a problem of classification. If the time for performance has arrived, and a case of actual breach established, the court may approach the issue of termination either from the point of view of the nature of the promisor’s breach or by reference to the repudiation doctrine. Second, where the time for performance by the promisor has not arrived, that is, a case of prospective breach, it may be difficult to prove that the requirement of seriousness is satisfied. [30-33] Basis of the right to terminate. Before discussing the problems referred
to above it is appropriate to consider the basis of the promisor’s right to terminate in cases of repudiation. Various bases have been suggested for the right to terminate which exists under the repudiation doctrine,128 including: the repudiation is an ‘offer’ of a breach that the promisee is entitled to accept;129 the repudiation is a present breach which gives rise to a right to terminate;130 [page 698] the existence of an implied term prohibiting repudiation;131 impossibility or prevention of performance;132 protection of the promisee’s expectations;133 convenience;134 and the existence of an ‘inevitable’ breach of contract.135 Although a particular fact situation may justify the application of any of these theories, the offer and acceptance theory has been discredited as a general explanation.136 Anglo-Australian law provides little support for the present breach view in cases where the absence of readiness or willingness precedes the time of performance.137 To the extent that the doctrine is a means to an end, the right to terminate is largely a matter of convenience, although this hardly provides a conceptual framework. In order to explain the existence of a right to terminate in cases where the repudiation precedes the time of performance, the courts frequently rely on the inevitable breach theory. Thus, if it is clear that the promisor will not (or cannot) perform, the right to terminate exists because the law permits the promisee to anticipate a breach which is, for practical purposes, inevitable. In cases where the promisor is wholly and finally disabled from performing contractual obligations it would be pointless to require the promisee to wait, so the law treats the promisor’s breach as inevitable in that situation as well. Where the repudiation arises merely from the promisor’s words or conduct it might be objected that the breach cannot be regarded as inevitable for the simple reason that the promisor might change his or her mind and actually perform. However, the doctrine of repudiation permits the promisee to take the promisor
at his or her word, and the promisor cannot retract the repudiation once the performance of the contract has been terminated.138 Accordingly, damages are generally assessed on the basis of a breach at the time when performance would have been due, rather than at the time of the promisor’s repudiation or the promisee’s election to terminate.139 Because the breach is regarded as inevitable, the [page 699] promisor is not permitted to defeat the promisee’s claim by proving, for example, that he or she would have been able to perform had there been no repudiation, or that the contract would have been frustrated,140 or that a contractual right to terminate would have been exercised.141 One criticism of the inevitable breach theory is that it tends to explain the consequences of termination rather than the existence of the right to terminate. Another is that in some cases the inevitability of breach is largely fictional, and nice questions can arise in the assessment of damages.142 [30-34] The problem of classification. The problem of classification is largely, but not entirely, academic. Differing views have been expressed as to the scope of the repudiation doctrine. Lord Denning MR143 once suggested that the concept should be utilised only in cases of anticipatory breach. This supports the view that where an absence of readiness or willingness involves an actual failure to perform, the right to terminate must be based on the character of the term breached and the consequences of the breach. On the other hand, in Shevill v Builders Licensing Board,144 Gibbs CJ considered that there was ‘high authority’ to support the proposition that, except in cases where the absence of readiness or willingness involves a breach of condition, or triggers a contractual right to terminate, the existence of a right to terminate depends on the application of the repudiation doctrine. The solution would seem to lie somewhere between these opposing views. Where an absence of readiness or willingness involves a breach of condition there is no need, so far as the right to terminate is concerned, to invoke the repudiation concept. Breach of condition may in some cases amount to a repudiation, and the presence or absence of repudiation may be important to other matters, such as the assessment of damages. But since the right to terminate necessarily follows from the promisor’s failure to perform where there
is a breach of condition, the repudiation doctrine is irrelevant to that right. On the other hand, if the promisor has merely breached a warranty the repudiation concept will be relevant since no right to terminate will accrue to the promisee unless it can be established that the absence of readiness or willingness is so serious as to amount to a repudiation of substantially the whole contract.145 If the absence of readiness or willingness causes the promisor to breach an intermediate term, and a right to terminate arises, the distinction between termination for breach and termination for repudiation is admittedly subtle. The right to terminate should, as was explained earlier, be seen as stemming from the breach if the consequences are sufficiently serious.146 However, a right to terminate may arise under the repudiation [page 700] doctrine even though the consequences are not particularly serious if, for example, it is ‘unjust’ or ‘unfair’147 to hold the promisee to the contract, for example, because the absence of readiness or willingness implies a fundamental disregard of the contract. The two concepts merge if it is established that the foreseeable consequences of a promisor’s breach are further breaches on the promisor’s part, and the accumulation of breaches would be seriously detrimental to the promisee. The reason the concepts merge is that the consequences of the promisor’s breach — the focal point of the intermediate term concept — are synonymous with the focal point of the repudiation concept, namely, a serious absence of readiness or willingness to perform on the part of the promisor. The classification problem is not entirely academic because the nature of the evidence required under the intermediate term concept differs from that required under the repudiation concept. Under the latter the emphasis is on the words and conduct of the promisor and evidence of what has been said and done may differ quite substantially from evidence directed to the impact of a breach on the promisee. The choice of evidence is important because the extent of the absence of readiness or willingness, and the impact of the breach, are both largely factual issues.148 [30-35] The problem of prospective breach. The main problem of prospective breach is the conception of a breach without a failure to perform. Out of the conceptual problem at least three legal difficulties emerge.
(1) How certain must it be that the promisor will breach the contract? (2) How serious must the breach be? (3) In cases where the seriousness of a breach depends on its consequences, how are the consequences established? The general approach to the problem of prospective breach is illustrated by Federal Commerce and Navigation Co Ltd v Molena Alpha Inc,149 which concerned three time charterparties. Notwithstanding cl 9 of these contracts, which provided that the masters of the vessels were to be under the orders of the charterers as regards employment of the vessels, the owners threatened to instruct the masters not to sign any bill of lading endorsed ‘freight prepaid’. The House of Lords held that such conduct would involve a breach of cl 9, but that such a breach would not necessarily justify termination by the charterers since the term was not a condition. The charterers’ right to terminate depended on the consequences which would flow from the breach which the owners had threatened. The umpire had found that, had the owners actually breached the contract, the consequences for the charterers would have been very serious indeed. For example, the vessels in question would have been barred from the CIF trade which, as the owners well knew, was essential to the charterers. It did [page 701] not matter that the owners had acted bona fide150 on legal advice that cl 18 of the charters justified their conduct since it was clear, to any reasonable person in the position of the charterers that, if the owners carried out the threat, the charterers would suffer great loss. There was, therefore, a repudiation by the shipowners, based on proof of a sufficiently serious breach of an intermediate term. Under the Federal Commerce case, it is sufficient for it to be ‘clear’151 that the breach will occur, provided the prospective breach is of a kind that would, on its occurrence, give rise to a right to terminate for breach. If the promisee is forced to rely on the (hypothetical) consequences of the breach it is sufficient that serious consequences would, in the opinion of informed persons, flow from the breach. It can also be inferred from the Federal Commerce case that, had cl 9 been classified as a condition, the charterers could have justified their termination without proving that serious consequences would have resulted from the breach, on the basis that where a term is classified as a condition any
(prospective) breach of it is a sufficient justification for termination.152 [30-36] Scope of the doctrine. The doctrine of repudiation can be excluded by the parties. Such exclusion must be expressly stated or arise by necessary implication from the terms of the contract. Express exclusion is rare, but the possibility of implied exclusion is not so remote.153 For example, in Amann Aviation Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth154 a clause (cl 2.24) conferred a right of termination on the Commonwealth ‘Whenever and so often as the Contractor fails to carry out the contract or comply with a condition of the contract to the satisfaction of the Secretary’ of the Department of Transport, and imposed a show cause procedure under which the Secretary could call upon the contractor to show cause ‘in writing to the satisfaction of the Secretary, why the contract or any specified portion thereof should not be cancelled’. The court considered the termination clause to be a more or less exclusive code for termination. Davies J said that all that was left of the common law bases for termination was ‘repudiation … in its strict sense’ of anticipatory breach.155 From time to time it has been suggested that particular types of contracts are excluded from the repudiation doctrine. Consideration will be given [page 702] later to the treatment of unilateral and partially executed contracts.156 At this stage it is sufficient to note that leases, bills of exchange, arbitration clauses and partnership agreements have given rise to controversy. A contract to enter into a lease is subject to the doctrines of repudiation and anticipatory breach.157 Moreover, although on the grant of the lease an interest in the land arises, it is now clear that the doctrines of repudiation and anticipatory breach apply to the lease itself.158 In Progressive Mailing House Pty Ltd v Tabali Pty Ltd159 the lessor leased factory premises to the lessee for a period of five years. Clause 10.1 provided that in the event of any rent payable under the lease remaining unpaid for 14 days, or the lessee’s failure to perform any term of the lease (and failure to remedy same after 30 days’ notice to rectify), the lessor could re-enter the land. Rent was unpaid for a number of months and the lessee failed to remedy breaches of other terms of the lease pursuant to a notice served by the lessor. These events were held to give rise to a right to terminate the lease and to re-enter the land pursuant to cl 10.1. The High Court made it clear that the general principles of repudiation apply to leases, and used those principles to
justify an award of substantial damages in favour of the lessor.160 Nevertheless, apart from the general difficulty of proving that the requirement of seriousness has been satisfied, a number of problems still arise. It may be that satisfaction of the statutory requirements for forfeiture161 is a prerequisite to invocation of the repudiation doctrine, at least where the repudiation is based on breach by failure to perform the lease. Difficulties may also arise where damages are claimed following termination. If the election to terminate is based solely on a contractual right to terminate, damages for loss of the bargain may not be available.162 In at least three Australian cases163 it has been stated that the doctrine of repudiation does not apply to bills of exchange, at least in so far as it would create an anticipatory breach in advance of actual dishonour of the bill. It may be that application of the doctrine depends on whether the bill has been taken as absolute or conditional payment.164 If the creditor has agreed [page 703] to accept the bill as an absolute payment there is something to be said for the view that the creditor is required to give whatever credit the bill allows, even though the debtor has repudiated his or her obligation under the bill. On the other hand, if the bill was taken as conditional payment there seems to be no reason, in principle, for not allowing the creditor to proceed for the recovery of the money in reliance on the contractual obligation to pay in respect of which the bill was given. However, since the action is for anticipatory breach, the creditor cannot recover the payment as a debt due; the creditor must recover it by way of damages, and some discount may be necessary to take account of recovery in advance of the time when the bill would have fallen due for payment.165 The doctrine of repudiation, like that of the intermediate term,166 gives rise to a right to terminate all, but not part, of the parties’ contractual obligations unperformed at the time of termination. This limitation on the scope of the doctrine does not apply to an arbitration clause, and the doctrine can be applied to permit termination of the parties’ obligations under the clause. One explanation is that an arbitration clause ‘constitutes a self-contained contract collateral or ancillary’167 to the contract in which it is found. In Hurst v Bryk168 Lord Millett suggested169 that it was ‘doubtful’ whether the
doctrine of repudiation applies to a partnership relationship. Although the House of Lords was able to dismiss the appeal without having to decide the point, the English Court of Appeal had taken the view170 that the doctrine does apply to partnership contracts. Lord Millett reasoned that because the partnership legislation, in setting out the circumstances in which a relationship might be dissolved, does not refer to repudiation it would be inconsistent with that legislation to apply the doctrine of repudiation. With respect, dissolution differs from termination. The former may only be achieved through court orders, whereas the latter merely depends on whether a partner has validly elected to terminate for breach or repudiation. It is difficult to see why partners should not (subject to the terms of the partnership contract) enjoy normal rights of termination in relation to their contract of partnership. Thus, if a partnership has two members and one of the partners repudiates the contract, it should be open to the other to terminate the contract so as, for example, to ensure that no further partnership liabilities are incurred. In other words, termination for repudiation may be a legitimate step which precedes a petition to have the partnership dissolved. [page 704]
Repudiation Based on Words or Conduct171 [30-37] Express refusal to perform. The clearest case of a repudiation of obligation is an express refusal to perform. For example, in the landmark case of Hochster v De la Tour,172 the defendant agreed to employ the plaintiff for a specified period as a courier. Before the employment was due to commence the defendant repudiated his obligations by telling the plaintiff that his services were not required. The plaintiff having accepted the repudiation, the court held that the plaintiff was entitled to succeed in an action for damages for anticipatory breach. The principle applies even though the promisor’s obligation to perform is subject to a contingency which has not been fulfilled. Thus, in Frost v Knight,173 the plaintiff successfully sued for anticipatory breach of a promise to marry, even though the marriage was to take place on the death of the defendant’s father and notwithstanding that the repudiation occurred (and proceedings were commenced) prior to the fulfilment of that contingency.
Two points should be noted about the cases considered above. First, although both concerned refusals to perform prior to the time of performance, there is no doubt that an express refusal after the arrival of the time of performance also gives rise to a right to terminate.174 Second, although the defendant in each case repudiated all his contractual obligations, a repudiation may arise in less extreme cases, provided that the requirement of seriousness is satisfied. In this respect it is important to appreciate that a wilful, but partial, refusal to perform is not necessarily a repudiation. Even if a wilful refusal constitutes a breach of contract there is no rule of law that the refusal amounts to a repudiation.175 It may be easier to establish repudiation where the refusal is wilful,176 but the requirement of seriousness must still be satisfied. Similarly, a repudiation may occur where the promisor merely refuses to perform in accordance with the contract. The decision in Federal Commerce and Navigation Co Ltd v Molena Alpha Inc177 provides an example of this in the context of anticipatory breach. Associated Newspapers Ltd v Bancks178 is an example in the context of refusal after the arrival of the time of performance. The promisor’s breach was there held to amount to a repudiation even if the term breached was a warranty rather than a condition. [page 705] [30-38] Implied refusal to perform. Even if there is no express refusal to perform, a promisee may establish repudiation if a refusal can be inferred from the promisor’s words or conduct. Lord Coleridge CJ formulated the test, in Freeth v Burr,179 as being ‘whether the acts or conduct … amount to an intimation of an intention to abandon and altogether to refuse performance of the contract’. Such an ‘intimation’ will be established if the words or conduct of the promisor make it ‘quite plain’180 that the promisor will not perform, or not perform in accordance with the contract. Of course, the requirement of seriousness must also be satisfied. Cases on contracts for the sale of goods by instalments frequently provide examples of implied refusals to perform. Under the sale of goods legislation181 the court must have regard to the terms of the contract and the ‘circumstances of the case’ in deciding whether a breach by either the seller or the buyer amounts to a repudiation. An express refusal to perform is sufficient to establish a
repudiation, but an implied refusal will also be sufficient. As Bigham J explained in Millars’ Karri and Jarrah Co (1902) v Weddel Turner & Co,182 if a buyer fails to pay for one delivery, or the seller delivers goods differing from the requirements of the contract, a repudiation may occur if the circumstances lead to the inference future breaches will occur. This does not mean that where the promisee reasonably infers (from the existence of a breach) that further breaches will occur, there is necessarily a repudiation. The breaches, even when added together, may not satisfy the requirement of seriousness.183 But if the accumulated breaches are sufficiently serious the other party is entitled to terminate the contract. Thus, in Warinco AG v Samor SpA,184 buyers under a contract for the sale of rapeseed oil of good, wholesome, merchantable quality rejected the first of the two instalments deliverable under the contract, claiming it was not in accordance with the contract. In fact it was in accordance with the contract requirements and the sellers drew the inference, from communications with the buyers, that the second instalment would also be rejected. They therefore terminated the performance of the contract. The court held that the sellers were, in the circumstances, entitled to draw the inference and justified in terminating on the ground of repudiation because the refusal of the buyers related to all their outstanding obligations.185 [page 706] In Maple Flock Co Ltd v Universal Furniture Products (Wembley) Ltd186 the court said that apart from the probability that the breach will be repeated it may be relevant to consider the ratio, quantitatively, which the ‘breach bears to the contract as a whole’. The contract in issue related to ‘rag flock’ and provided for the delivery of 100 tons at a rate of three loads, each of one ton, per week. Of the first 19 deliveries one was found to be defective and the buyers relied on this as a repudiation by the sellers. However, the chances of the breach being repeated were found to be ‘practically negligible’ and a breach in relation to one ton, out of a contract for 100 tons, was not a serious matter. There was, therefore, no repudiation by the sellers.187 [30-39] Erroneous construction of the contract. Where a promisor adopts an erroneous construction of the contract a repudiation may occur if the promisor acts on the construction by breaching one or more terms, or by evincing an intention to perform only in accordance with his or her construction.
Performance in accordance with an erroneous construction will not discharge the promisor, and will amount to a breach of contract, but a repudiation will not occur unless the requirement of seriousness is satisfied, for example, because the promisor is not ready and willing to perform major contractual obligations.188 It does not matter that the promisor has done his or her best to perform, since the obligation may be strict in nature. For example, a repudiation was established in Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd189 even though the advertisers had no control over the movement of the trams carrying the advertisements. They had construed the contract in such a way that they would be discharged by their performance if, taken overall, the advertisements were displayed for an average of eight hours per day. However, the contract actually required them to display each advertisement for substantially eight hours per day. It was no defence that they did not control the movements of the trams as their standard of duty was strict. If the promisor evinces an intention to perform in accordance with an erroneous construction the promisor may be found to have refused to perform in accordance with the contract, even though not actually intending to repudiate. Thus, Lord Wright said in Ross T Smyth & Co Ltd v T D Bailey Son & Co190 that it is not: necessary to show that the party alleged to have repudiated should have an actual intention not to fulfil the contract. He may be determined to do so only in a manner substantially inconsistent with his obligations, and not in any other way.
[page 707] An example is Federal Commerce and Navigation Co Ltd v Molena Alpha Inc,191 where, because of their erroneous construction of the contract, the shipowners threatened to act in a way which was substantially inconsistent with their contractual obligations. There was no subjective intention to repudiate, but a repudiation nevertheless occurred even though the shipowners had acted bona fide. [30-40] Wrongful termination. The general rule is that a wrongful termination of the performance of a contract constitutes a repudiation.192 Thus, if a promisor purports to ‘cancel’, ‘end’, ‘terminate’, ‘rescind’ or ‘determine’ the contract or its performance in circumstances in which there is no right to do so, the promisor’s conduct may generally be treated by the promisee as a repudiation.193 Since the promisor’s ‘termination’ is wrongful it is not effective as such, and the promisee
is not obliged to accept it by terminating the performance of the contract.194 It makes no difference whether the wrongful termination takes place before or after the arrival of the time for performance by the promisor. The requirement of seriousness is satisfied because the promisor is repudiating all outstanding contractual obligations. [30-41] Bona fides and absoluteness. There is no doubt that, in considering whether a repudiation has taken place, it is legitimate to have regard to whether the promisor has acted bona fide, and whether the words or conduct are absolute in character.195 However, the test of repudiation is objective, and based mainly on considerations of fact. Therefore, a repudiation can be established even though the promisor has acted bona fide and notwithstanding that the words or conduct do not amount to an absolute refusal to be bound by the contract. As Asprey JA said in Satellite Estate Pty Ltd v Jaquet:196 Moreover, where the conduct of one of the parties … has been such as would lead a reasonable person to the conclusion that he does not intend to fulfil his part of the obligation, the other party to the contract, whatever in fact may have been the actual intention of the former, may treat such conduct as an intimation that the contract has been repudiated …
It may be necessary to inquire into the bona fides of the promisor where termination in reliance on a contractual right to terminate is not justified by the circumstances. The issue is whether the promisor can be found to have repudiated where termination, though wrongful, was based on a bona fide belief in its validity. For example, in Woodar Investment Development Ltd v Wimpey Construction UK Ltd,197 purchasers of land purported to exercise a [page 708] contractual right to ‘rescind’ because of the commencement of procedures for compulsory acquisition of part of the property. Although they acted bona fide in the belief that they could rescind, there was in fact no right to do so because no acquisition procedures on which they could rely had been commenced. The purchasers’ termination was wrongful, but held by a majority of the House of Lords not to constitute a repudiation. Because the purchasers had acted bona fide there was no repudiation and the vendors should have approached the court, by way of a construction summons, to obtain a declaration vindicating their view before taking the step of terminating the performance of the contract. Alternatively, they should have sought specific performance.
The relevance of bona fides is not restricted to cases of wrongful termination in purported reliance on a contractual right. For example, in Mersey Steel and Iron Co Ltd v Naylor Benzon & Co198 buyers under an instalment goods contract refused to pay for goods delivered by the sellers because of a bona fide, but erroneous, belief that the presentation of a petition to wind up the sellers meant that payment could only be made with the court’s sanction. The House of Lords held that there was no repudiation by the buyers since they had acted bona fide and the only effect of their conduct would be to delay payment for a short period of time. Bona fides is also relevant to cases where the words or conduct of the promisor involve the maintenance of an erroneous construction of the contract. A court will be reluctant to infer repudiation where there is a bona fide mistake as to the legal effect of the contract.199 The emphasis on a promisor’s bona fides can be overstated and may cause difficulties. For example, in the Mersey Steel case the sellers had reacted to the buyers’ conduct by terminating the performance of the contract. Applying the general rule that a wrongful termination is a repudiation the House of Lords awarded the buyers damages for repudiation;200 yet in some cases the bona fides of the promisee may also be relevant and there is certainly a risk of the objectivity of the repudiation concept being lost in the search for the parties’ actual intentions. However, bona fides can have no relevance at all where the promisor’s conduct involves a serious breach of contract, as was the position in Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd.201 Similarly, if the promisor embarks on a course of conduct which will be seriously prejudicial to the promisee, the promisee should be permitted to terminate for repudiation, the fact that the promisor has acted bona fide should be irrelevant where the parties are subject to ongoing performance obligations. For example, in [page 709] Federal Commerce and Navigation Co Ltd v Molena Alpha Inc,202 the bona fides of the shipowners did not prevent them repudiating their obligations because the consequences of what they had threatened to do would have been disastrous for the charterers.
Repudiation Based on Inability203
[30-42] Declared inability and disabling conduct. The clearest case of repudiation based on an inability to perform is where the promisor expressly declares that it is unable to perform all contractual obligations.204 However, the declaration need not be express and may, therefore, be inferred from conduct. As Devlin J said in Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati,205 ‘a profession by words or conduct of inability is by itself enough to constitute renunciation’. Thus, even if a promisor does not expressly state an inability to perform, a repudiation will occur if the only reasonable inference from the promisor’s words or conduct is an inability to perform the contract. Where the contract relates to a specific subject matter, or if there is a personal element in performance, a disabling act by the promisor will amount to a repudiation. For example, if A agrees to convey a particular piece of land to B, but instead conveys it to C, A’s act can be treated by B as a repudiation because the conduct is a disabling act which is manifestly inconsistent with the obligation to convey the land to B.206 Similarly, the voluntary liquidation of an employercompany may amount to a repudiation of a contract of employment.207 In order to establish repudiation a promisee must be able to prove that the requirement of seriousness is satisfied. In the examples given above the requirement is satisfied because the words or conduct relate to all, or substantially all, of the promisor’s obligations. However, the words or conduct need not go so far. For example, in Foran v Wight208 a contract for the sale of land dated 24 December 1982 fixed completion for 22 June 1983. The vendors told the purchasers on 20 June that they would be unable to settle on time because a right of way which the vendors were required to provide had not been registered. This was a repudiation by the vendors because time was of the essence. [30-43] Factual inability. Where the promisor’s inability results from words or conduct the promisee need not prove that the promisor was in fact unable to perform. For example, if A agrees to convey land to B but instead conveys it to C, B can establish repudiation without proving that A was unable to repurchase the land from C. Once B has terminated the [page 710] performance of the contract the law treats B’s cause of action as complete. In cases of factual inability the position is different since, in order to rely on the
promisor’s inability, the promisee must prove that the promisor was in fact ‘wholly and finally disabled’209 from performing the contract. The emphasis, therefore, is on the promisor’s actual position rather than on what the promisor has said or done. For example, in Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati210 Devlin J held that shipowners could succeed on the ground of factual inability when the charterer under a voyage charterparty was so placed as to be unable to find and load a cargo before the expiry of a period of time sufficient to frustrate the commercial purpose of the contract. Again, in Rawson v Hobbs211 the High Court held that the purchaser of a grazing property could rely on the vendor’s inability to convey title when it was clear that the vendor would not be able to obtain the consent of a government Minister, required by the contract, to the transfer of title. Factual inability is very difficult to prove,212 and usually a matter of last resort. Thus, the usual case is where a ground stated at the time of termination turns out to be unfounded and the promisee seeks to justify termination by reference to factual inability on the part of the promisor. It is a general principle of termination that a promisee may rely on a valid ground even though not stated at the time of termination.213 But the promisor in such a case may seek to argue that the erroneous ground given shows that the promisee’s termination was itself a wrongful repudiation of the contract. Notwithstanding suggestions in some of the cases214 that this argument may be made against the promisee, it is now clear that these suggestions are wrong in principle.215 Therefore, if a promisee who terminates is able to show, at the time of termination, that the promisor was wholly and finally disabled from performing, the promisee’s termination will be regarded as valid.216 [30-44] Inferred inability.217 The extent to which a promisee is permitted to rely on inferred inability is uncertain. Termination for [page 711] ‘inferred inability’ refers to termination based on the ground that a reasonable person in the promisee’s position would draw the inference that the promisor is wholly and finally disabled from performing. It seems that where there is conduct, such as a breach of contract by the promisor, the promisee is permitted to terminate (assuming that the requirement of seriousness is satisfied), if the circumstances would suggest to a reasonable person that the promisor will be
unable to perform in the future.218 It is important to know whether the principle of inferred inability extends to other situations. If it does a promisee who validly terminates on the ground of inferred inability will be protected from an action for wrongful termination if it transpires, when all the facts are ascertained, that the promisor would in fact have been able to perform. In the context of frustration it is clear that a principle of inferred inability is of general application. Therefore, it operates irrespective of whether the performance of the contract has actually commenced.219 There is some support for the same approach to anticipatory breach in the context of contracts for the sale of land.220 However, the value of the principle is its commercial convenience and the real issue is whether it applies in that context. In Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati221 Devlin J took the view that the principle does not apply to cases of anticipatory breach, at least where the only basis for the inference of inability is the promisor’s position. Devlin J’s opinion was based on a fear that a promisee entitled to terminate on the ground of inferred inability might receive substantial damages even if it turned out that the promisor would have been able to perform. His fear stemmed from a view of the consequences of the inevitable breach basis222 of the doctrine of anticipatory breach. However, the fact that the law permits a promisee to anticipate a breach, and so regards the promisor’s breach as inevitable, tells us only that the promisee is entitled to recover nominal damages.223 Any right to substantial damages depends on proof of actual loss or damage. In so far as Devlin J’s views about the principle of inferred inability depended on the conclusions he drew from the inevitable breach basis for the doctrine of anticipatory breach, subsequent decisions require the matter to be reconsidered.224 Indeed, a strong argument can be made for the application of the principle of inferred inability in the context of anticipatory breach. An alternative approach would be to permit the promisee to demand an assurance of performance where there is doubt as to the promisor’s ability to perform. A right to terminate could then be based on the failure to provide an adequate assurance.225 But under Australian226 law there is no general right for a promisee to demand an [page 712] assurance of due performance.227 At best an unfulfilled assurance is some
evidence of repudiation.228
The Acceptance Requirement229 [30-45] ‘Acceptance’ of a repudiation. The word ‘acceptance’ is used in the context of repudiation to describe the promisee’s decision (‘election’) to terminate the performance of the contract. Therefore, acceptance of a repudiation is necessary if the promisee wishes to terminate the performance of the contract.230 Acceptance is also required to complete the promisee’s cause of action for damages in cases where the repudiation precedes the time for performance.231 For example, if frustration occurs prior to acceptance, damages cannot be claimed.232 Acceptance is also important to the locus poenitentiae (‘time for repentance’) afforded by the repudiation doctrine. This is the idea that, generally, a promisor may retract a verbal repudiation which has not been accepted, and call upon the promisee to perform.233 Therefore, acceptance by the promisee will prevent the promisor retracting the repudiation.234 However, the promisor’s power to retract a repudiation at any time prior to acceptance is subject to an important qualification. If the repudiation has been relied upon by the promisee, for example, in not performing obligations because of the belief, induced by the promisor’s repudiation, that performance would be futile, the promisor must give notice of retraction and allow the promisee time to perform.235 [page 713] [30-46] Position where repudiation accepted. The consequences of acceptance do not differ from those attributable to an election to terminate for breach by failure to perform.236 The general propositions stated later237 apply to the acceptance of a repudiation. Therefore, although both parties are discharged from the obligation to perform (or to be ready and willing to perform) their respective contractual duties, accrued rights and liabilities are not affected.238 [30-47] Position where repudiation not accepted.239 Where the promisor’s repudiation is not accepted by the promisee, the question may arise whether, and to what extent, the promisee is discharged by the unaccepted repudiation. Generally speaking a repudiation continues to operate as such until it has been
retracted by the promisor. In Foran v Wight240 the vendors were regarded as continuing to repudiate when they failed to settle the transaction after their statement of inability. However, the vendors sought to treat the failure of the purchasers to tender the purchase price on the day for settlement as the breach of an essential time stipulation. The High Court said that the repudiation by the vendors meant that the purchasers were not in breach by failing to tender the purchase price. There will, however, be cases in which a repudiation is nullified by the promisee’s actions notwithstanding the absence of retraction by the promisor. For example, in Bowes v Chaleyer,241 a seller of silk elected to continue performance after repudiation by the buyer, and tendered goods to the buyer. The buyer’s decision to reject the goods was upheld by the High Court on the ground that by failing to ship the goods in accordance with the contract the seller had breached a condition. The buyer’s repudiation did not preclude his later rejection of the goods because the seller had elected to continue with the contract. As can be inferred from the above, an unaccepted repudiation is not without legal effect. Most important is the idea that an unaccepted repudiation may absolve a promisee from the consequences which would otherwise attach to a failure on the promisee’s part to discharge contractual obligations. The leading case is Peter Turnbull & Co Pty Ltd v Mundus Trading Co (Australasia) Pty Ltd,242 where a sale of goods contract required the buyers to nominate a vessel which could load at Sydney in January or February. No nomination was made by the buyers because the sellers repudiated their contractual obligations. However, that repudiation was not accepted by the buyers prior to the time at which they should (under the contract) have nominated a vessel, and when they eventually brought their [page 714] action for damages the sellers’ defence was that the buyers had breached a condition by not making a nomination. A majority of the High Court held that the buyers were entitled to succeed in their action because the sellers’ repudiation ‘dispensed’ with the nomination. The case indicates that it is a little misleading to say, as is commonly done, that a repudiation has no effect ‘until’243 acceptance has occurred. Although the buyers were not fully discharged until they accepted the sellers’ repudiation, the buyers were in the meantime absolved from any adverse consequences which would otherwise have
attached to their failure to nominate the vessel. The Peter Turnbull case has been followed on a number of occasions.244 There are also similar English authorities.245 What these cases did not settle is whether a promisee may rely on the unaccepted repudiation as a basis for saying that there is no obligation to remain ready and willing to perform. Normally termination is required for this consequence.246 Some of the English cases nevertheless suggested that a promisee would not be required to remain ready and willing to perform, even in cases where the contract is affirmed after the repudiation.247 This is difficult to justify since it is acceptance of the repudiation which absolves the promisee from the obligation to remain ready and willing to perform. In Fercometal SARL v Mediterranean Shipping Co SA248 the House of Lords indicated that there is no such principle, and that an unaccepted repudiation will not usually absolve the promisee from both the obligation to perform and also from the obligation to remain ready and willing. This is consistent with the Turnbull case which clearly proceeded on the basis that the buyers remained ready and willing to perform. This issue was the subject of much discussion in Foran v Wight, where the trial judge had found that the purchasers were unable to prove their ability to perform. The High Court was unanimous in holding that this finding was not fatal to the purchasers’ claim to have validly terminated the contract after the date for settlement, there being no evidence of inability at the time of the vendors’ declaration of inability to perform. Conflicting views were, however, expressed on why this was so, and application of the law produced a difference of opinion on the facts. Mason CJ dissented because, treating estoppel249 as the basis for the absolving effects of an unaccepted repudiation, he could find no evidence of detriment, that is, there was no causal connection between the purchasers’ inability to find finance and the vendors’ repudiation. Brennan J and Dawson J did not regard the finding of the trial judge as equivalent to a finding that the purchasers could not perform. The purchasers could succeed because the vendors had not proved the purchasers to have been wholly and finally [page 715] disabled from performing the contract. For Deane J the purchasers did not need to show that, but for the vendors’ repudiation, they would have been able to perform. In so far as they relied on estoppel, the majority judges were satisfied
that the purchasers had, to some extent at least, refrained from taking steps to obtain finance because of the vendors’ repudiation.250 The discussion above indicates that Asquith LJ’s colourful statement in Howard v Pickford Tool Co Ltd,251 that an unaccepted repudiation is a ‘thing writ in water and of no value to anybody: it confers no legal rights of any sort or kind’ is a misleading, unhelpful and gross oversimplification of the law.
Delay in Performance General [30-48] Relevance of delay. Delay may be relevant in two ways. First, there may be delay in the sense that the promisor does not perform at the appointed time. Second, delay may be a consequence of breach, as in Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd,252 where a shipowner’s breach of the obligation to provide a seaworthy vessel caused the vessel to be laid up while repairs were carried out. In the first situation delay involves the breach of a time stipulation, whereas in the second situation delay is a consequence of the breach of some other type of term. [30-49] Treatment of time stipulations. As was explained earlier,253 the courts of common law and equity differed in their treatment of time stipulations, the common law courts taking a stricter view and treating failure to perform on time as a serious breach. The more liberal view of the equity court now prevails as a result of statutory provisions such as s 13 of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW).254 However, the distinction between essential and non-essential time stipulations is still very important. Using the terminology of the tripartite classification,255 essential time stipulations are conditions, and non-essential time stipulations either warranties or intermediate terms. Whether or not time is essential depends on the construction of the contract. It is arguable that the separate treatment of time stipulations is unnecessary for two reasons. First, the rules on termination for breach can generally be applied to time stipulations.256 Second, where a promisor ‘breaches’ a time stipulation the breach is arguably merely the defective performance of a substantive obligation.257 As against these reasons there is the simple fact that historically
the courts have preferred to give time [page 716] stipulations a distinct operation and are likely to continue to do so. It can also be said that the time stipulation concept is necessary to explain why the breach of a fundamental obligation, such as that of a purchaser of land to pay the agreed price, does not necessarily give rise to a right to terminate. An obligation may be essential or fundamental — the purchaser must pay for the land — even though timely performance (payment at the agreed time) is not essential. Thus, the courts inquire into whether the term stating the time for performance is essential.
Breach of Essential Time Stipulation258 [30-50] Express agreement. The parties may expressly agree that time is essential, with respect to a particular time stipulation or with regard to all time stipulations appearing in the contract. Thus, it is quite common in contracts for the sale of land to find provisions stating that time is ‘of the essence’ of the contract.259 Breach of such a time stipulation gives rise to a right to terminate.260 It is not necessary for the parties to use the words ‘time is of the essence of this contract’. An express agreement to make time essential may be stated in other ways, for example, by a term stating that any failure to perform at the time appointed is a repudiation of the contract.261 [30-51] Implied agreement. Even if time is not expressly made essential, a right to terminate will arise on the breach of a time stipulation if it can be inferred from the construction of the contract that the parties intended performance on time to be of the essence. In construing the contract particular regard will be had to the nature of the subject matter and the circumstances surrounding the contract.262 Thus, time may be regarded as essential because of the perishable, fluctuating or wasting nature of the subject matter, such as the stock of a business sold under a contract for the sale of a business as a going concern.263 However, this does not mean that the factors referred to in the discussion of termination for breach of condition are irrelevant. For example, it may be important to consider the nature of the term and the nature of the contract. In this way time stipulations dealing
with deposits are often interpreted264 as essential terms, notwithstanding that, generally, time of payment is not essential.265 [page 717] Outside the context of standard form commercial contracts there is, and has always been, a reluctance to treat time stipulations as conditions in the absence of express agreement. For example, in Bettini v Gye266 it was alleged that an opera singer had breached his contract to arrive in London ‘without fail at least six days before the commencement of his engagement’. The court, assuming the allegation to be proved, held that it was not a sufficient justification for the employer’s decision to terminate as the term was not a condition. Notwithstanding the clear and somewhat emphatic words (‘without fail’) the court said that as the term did not go ‘to the root of the matter’ it was not a condition. [30-52] Commercial contracts. In order to promote certainty in commercial matters, time stipulations dealing with substantive obligations are usually treated as conditions.267 For example, with respect to contracts for the sale of goods, the times for shipment, delivery and acceptance of the goods have been held to be essential.268 However, the basis for such decisions is the presumed intention of the parties: the courts do not apply a rule that all time stipulations in commercial contracts are conditions. For example, time of payment is not usually essential where a sale of goods contract provides for payment in exchange for the goods.269 On the other hand, where payment is by way of a banker’s confirmed credit, the time for opening the credit will usually be essential because the credit operates as a guarantee of payment.270 The doctrine of the intermediate term has not had much impact on time stipulations in commercial contracts, partly for the reason that there is only one type of breach, namely, ‘to be late’,271 and partly because of the need for certainty. In Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama272 a term in an FOB contract for the sale of goods required the buyers to give at least 15 days’ notice of the probable readiness of the vessel which was to receive the goods. The buyers’ notice was not given in time to allow the full period and the House of Lords held that the buyers had breached a condition. Apart from a general concern with certainty, the relationship which existed between the nomination term and the obligation of the sellers to nominate the loading port was
emphasised. Since the term stating the latter obligation was a condition there was a sound basis for saying that the former was also a condition. It did not matter whether breach of the term [page 718] would cause serious loss or damage to the sellers because their right to terminate stemmed from the essential nature of the term. Nevertheless, a time stipulation may be treated as intermediate in character, at least in the sense that the gravity of a breach may depend on the length of delay.273 Thus, notwithstanding that a term is usually construed as intermediate on the basis that its breach may take various forms, the intermediate term terminology is legitimately applied to cases where, although there is only one form of breach, the degree of seriousness will depend on how long the delay lasts.274 Procedural terms in commercial contracts fall into this category. Where a term is procedural the court will not reach the conclusion that time is essential unless an express agreement is present or some peculiar feature of the contract justifies the conclusion that the parties impliedly agreed that time was essential.275 [30-53] Implied time stipulations. An implied time stipulation may be essential, as where a contract for the sale of goods specifies no time for delivery, or for the opening of a letter of credit, and the court implies a term requiring delivery within a reasonable time, or a term requiring the opening of the credit by the beginning of the shipment period.276 On the other hand, where a contract for the sale of land specifies no time for settlement, and the court implies that settlement must occur within a reasonable time, time is unlikely to be essential.
Breach of Non-essential Time Stipulation [30-54] Generally no right to terminate without notice. The general rule where time is not essential is that the promisor’s failure to perform on time does not give rise to a right to terminate unless the promisee first serves a notice requiring performance within a reasonable time.277 There are, however, two exceptions to this rule:278 (1) unreasonable delay in performance may amount to a repudiation or
frustrate the commercial purpose of the contract; or (2) the promisee may be entitled to anticipate failure to comply with a notice to perform. [30-55] Unreasonable delay. Although, in one sense, ‘unreasonable delay’ is simply a failure to perform on time, it follows from the general rule [page 719] stated in the previous paragraph that a promisee is not entitled to treat any delay as unreasonable, and to claim to be entitled to terminate. Therefore, when it is said that ‘unreasonable’ delay may of itself give rise to a right of termination,279 the expression is being used in a special sense. There are two possibilities. First, delay may be unreasonable because it amounts to a repudiation of obligation.280 Second, delay may be unreasonable because the breach has had serious consequences for the promisee. Thus, a promisee will be entitled to terminate for unreasonable delay where there is a ‘frustrating’ delay, that is, where the delay is so serious as to frustrate the commercial purpose of the contract.281 In some cases delay in remedying the breach of a contractual term may be so unreasonable as to give rise to a right to terminate.282 For example, where A, in breach of contract, tenders defective goods to B under a contract of hire, and B asks A to remedy the defects, unreasonable delay on A’s part gives rise to a right to terminate, either on the ground of repudiation or because the delay renders the performance of the contract substantially different.283 Whether delay is unreasonable is a question of fact284 depending, for example, on the nature of the contract and the detriment, loss or disadvantage suffered by the promisee. Where the time stipulation is implied, two periods of unreasonable delay must be established. The first period is necessary to establish a breach, and the second period required to establish a sufficiently serious breach or a repudiation. [30-56] Anticipated failure to comply with notice. In some situations a promisee may be able to terminate the performance of a contract on the ground that, had a notice been served on the promisor requiring performance within a reasonable time, the promisor would not have been able to comply with the notice.285
The principle was established by the decision of Devlin J in Etablissements Chainbaux SARL v Harbormaster Ltd,286 which concerned a contract for the sale of goods. The sellers ‘cancelled’ the contract on the ground that the buyers had not opened a letter of credit as required by the contract. Devlin J found a breach of the obligation but held that the sellers had [page 720] ‘waived’ their right to terminate. Therefore, although the time stipulation was originally essential, it ceased to be available to the sellers as a condition. Nevertheless, Devlin J held that the sellers could justify what they had done on the ground that if they had taken the course of serving a notice requiring the letter of credit to be opened within a reasonable time the buyers would not have been able to comply. A decision to terminate without notice for breach of a non-essential time stipulation certainly exposes the promisee to considerable risks, since it must be difficult to prove that the promisor was so placed that compliance with a reasonable notice would not have been possible. It is therefore a ‘perilous’287 course to take. The suggestion has also been made that the course is only available in respect of time stipulations which were originally essential.288 However, it is difficult to find any logical basis for this suggestion; and the only restriction which can logically be applied is that the breach by the promisor must be of such a nature that it would, at the time of its occurrence, have justified service of a notice requiring performance within a reasonable time.
Delay as Consequence of Breach [30-57] Criterion for delay. Assuming that the promisor has not breached a condition, the criterion to be applied where a breach of contract causes delay is the same as that applicable to the breach of a non-essential time stipulation. Therefore, the delay must be unreasonable, that is, so serious as to render the performance of the contract substantially different, or indicative of a repudiation. In the context of commercial contracts, ‘unreasonable’ delay again means delay sufficient to ‘frustrate’ the performance of the contract.289 [30-58] Actual and foreseeable delay. When deciding whether the criterion of
unreasonable delay has been satisfied regard may be had to both actual and foreseeable delay. For example, in Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd,290 shipowners breached cl 1 of a charterparty contract by delivering an unseaworthy vessel. The charter was for a period of 24 calendar months. The breach had caused a delay of nearly seven weeks when the charterers purported to terminate the performance of the contract, this being the period of time the vessel was off hire waiting for repairs. A foreseeable delay of nearly 13 weeks was also established, but the English Court of Appeal held that even when the actual delay which had occurred was added to the delay which was likely to occur, the performance of the contract could not be regarded as substantially different from that intended by the parties. The case at first sight seems hard on the charterers, but it must be remembered that they were under no [page 721] obligation to pay hire during the period in question, so that the delay did not substantially increase their burden of performance. It was also important that the charter had a considerable period of time to run at the time of the charterers’ wrongful termination. A different result would be reached in a short-term contract for the hire of a motor vehicle which is delivered in a defective condition, particularly if the contract requires the hirer to pay hire while the vehicle is off the road for repairs.291
Failure to Comply with Notice292 [30-59] The notice procedure. Where the promisor breaches a nonessential time stipulation the law usually permits the promisee to serve a notice the effect of which is expressed by saying that time becomes essential. This is the way in which the procedure is acknowledged, and preserved, by statutory provisions such as s 13 of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW).293 The ability of a promisee to dispense with the notice in some cases was explained earlier.294 [30-60] Time of service. The promisee, in order to rely on the notice procedure, must establish that the promisor has breached the contract. In cases where there is no express time stipulation there is no delay until a reasonable time has
expired, because the law allows the promisor a reasonable time to perform. The promisee must wait for that period to expire before serving the notice.295 On the other hand, where an express time stipulation is present the mere fact of breach is sufficient.296 Thus, so far as proof of breach is concerned, no question of unreasonable delay arises.297 Breach of one obligation does not entitle the promisee to serve notice requiring the performance of another obligation, distinct from the first, which has not been breached.298 [30-61] Requirements of the notice. The three basic requirements of the procedure are that the notice must: (1) inform the promisor of the obligation which is to be performed;299 [page 722] (2) fix a period of time which is, in the circumstances, a reasonable time for performance;300 and (3) clearly indicate, either that it makes time essential, or that failure to comply with the notice will give rise to a right to terminate.301 However, unless the contract specifies the form which the notice must take, no particular form is required, and it is the substance of the notice which counts.302 [30-62] Ability to make time essential. Three issues arise with respect to the promisee’s ability to make time essential by notice. First, to what terms and contracts does the procedure apply? Although the notice procedure is most frequently applied to conveyancing transactions, it is of general application and can be applied to any type of contract.303 It may not be practicable to apply it to some contracts, such as some commodity contracts, where the parties must make their decisions within short periods. But it is important to see that the notice procedure is not restricted to situations in which the statutory provisions dealing with the treatment of time stipulations have relevance. On the other hand, a term which merely provides for a contingency, and cannot be breached, is not subject to the procedure for the simple reason that there is no obligation to be performed.304 Second, what type of breach must be established? Any type of breach, in theory at least, gives rise to a right to serve a notice to perform.305 There is
obviously no requirement that the breach be such as to give rise to a right to terminate without notice. Nor need the promisor’s breach be wilful in character. However, the contract may itself lay down a notice procedure restricted to such cases and to be applied accordingly. Third, must the promisee be ready and willing to perform and not in breach of contract at the time of service? It is frequently said that the promisee must be ready and willing to perform at the time when the notice is served.306 But, strictly speaking, the requirement is that the person serving the notice be ready and willing to perform in accordance with the contract. This means that the promisee need not be (presently) ready and willing to perform obligations to be discharged in the future.307 [page 723] Consistently with this, a promisee in breach of contract is generally denied the right to serve a notice requiring the promisor to perform.308 However, it may be that the breach of a purely ‘collateral’ stipulation would not debar the promisee.309 It might even be argued that provided the promisee is ready and willing to perform at the time of service, an earlier breach should be disregarded. [30-63] Parties bound by the notice. Obviously the promisor is bound by the notice; but in many cases the promisee will also be bound.310 For example, where a vendor of land serves a notice to complete, both the purchaser and the vendor are bound by the notice. Therefore, a purchaser who is ready and willing to perform at the time specified in the notice may rely on a failure by the vendor to comply with its terms.311 [30-64] Effect of failure to comply. Where a promisor fails to comply with a notice to perform, the failure gives rise to a right to terminate because this can generally be regarded as a repudiation of obligation.312 In cases where noncompliance occurs despite the promisor’s willingness to perform it may be preferable to refer to the failure as a ‘fundamental’ breach, because the word ‘repudiation’ generally connotes an express or implied refusal to perform.313 However, the right to terminate cannot be ascribed to the breach of an essential contractual term. Strictly speaking, it is compliance with the notice which is essential. The notice procedure is evidentiary in character: the promisor’s failure to comply provides the promisee with evidence of a
repudiation of obligation or fundamental breach.314 The notice does not have the effect of converting a non-essential term into an essential term because this would effectively permit a unilateral variation of the contract.315
Unilateral and Partially Executed Contracts316 [30-65] Principles applicable to unilateral contracts. Where a unilateral contract exists there is only one promisor and therefore the issue of termination can only arise with respect to a breach or repudiation on his [page 724] or her part. Generally, however, the issue of termination does not in fact arise: usually a unilateral contract raises an issue of formation or performance. If a contract is established,317 and the promisee seeks to recover payment as a debt due318 there is no issue of termination. One situation where a right to terminate may exist in the case of a unilateral contract is where the promisor becomes unable to perform the promise.319 For example, where an optionor sells land to which the option relates to a third party, the conduct may be treated as a repudiation by the optionee.320 And where the promisor’s obligation requires the payment of money over time, a repudiation or serious breach on the promisor’s part may give rise to a right to terminate notwithstanding that the promisee has no obligations from which to be discharged. [30-66] Principles applicable to partially executed contracts. Where one party to a bilateral contract has fully performed his or her contractual obligations, the contract can be described as ‘partially executed’. Such a contract resembles a unilateral contract in one respect, namely, that one only of the parties has outstanding (‘executory’) obligations. Accordingly, the promisee has no further obligations to be discharged from. In Mackenzie v Rees321 Dixon J said that there was ‘no English decision which applies the doctrine of anticipatory breach to contracts completely executed on one side’. Nevertheless, the English Court of Appeal would seem to
have applied the anticipatory breach doctrine to a partially executed contract as long ago as the decision in Synge v Synge,322 where the defendant, by conveying the property to a third party, repudiated his contractual obligation to leave an interest in property to his wife. The contract had originally been executory, the plaintiff having promised to marry the defendant, but once marriage had taken place it was completely executed on the plaintiff ’s side. Perhaps Dixon J intended to confine himself to obligations to pay money, as his statement was made in the context of a bill of exchange. It is certainly arguable that there can be no anticipatory breach of the contract contained in the bill,323 but it is impossible to exclude all contracts to pay money from the doctrines of repudiation and anticipatory breach. For example, in Moschi v Lep Air Services Ltd324 the House of Lords saw no difficulty in applying the doctrine of repudiation to a partially executed contract under which the only outstanding obligation was to pay money. It was conceded that a repudiation had occurred, but Lord Diplock said that the consequences of [page 725] the promisor’s breach would in any event have justified termination by the promisee. That the position in Australia is still uncertain is indicated by the fact that in Wigan v Edwards325 the High Court left open for future decision the question whether Dixon J’s statement is of general application. 1.
See generally Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, ch 3.
2.
See J W Carter, ‘Discharge as the Basis for Termination for Breach of Contract’ (2012) 128 LQR 283. See further [32-01]–[32-03].
3.
See, eg Southern Foundries (1926) Ltd v Shirlaw [1940] AC 701 at 729.
4.
See [30-48]–[30-64].
5.
See [32-04].
6.
See, eg Johnson v Agnew [1980] AC 367. See generally Michael Albery, ‘Mr Cyprian Williams’ Great Heresy’ (1975) 91 LQR 337; Steven Lurie, ‘Towards a Unified Theory of Breach: Tracing the History of the Rule that Rescission Ab Initio Is Not a Remedy for Breach of Contract’ (2003) 19 JCL 250. See further [31-16].
7.
See Brooks Robinson Pty Ltd v Rothfield [1951] VLR 405. Cf Moschi v Lep Air Services Ltd [1973] AC 331 at 356.
8.
Cf [39-08] (equitable right of ‘rescission’ may arise out of a want of mutuality in the remedy of specific performance).
9.
Cf Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic), s 26.
10.
See [13-01]–[13-24].
11.
See Heyman v Darwins Ltd [1942] AC 356; Satellite Estate Pty Ltd v Jaquet (1968) 71 SR (NSW) 126.
12.
See [29-01].
13.
Afovos Shipping Co SA v Pagnan [1983] 1 WLR 195 at 203. But cf [30-34].
14.
See [14-07], [14-10].
15.
Direct Acceptance Finance Ltd v Cumberland Furnishing Pty Ltd [1965] NSWR 1504 at 1511; Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827 at 849.
16.
Afovos Shipping Co SA v Pagnan [1983] 1 WLR 195 at 201; but see [30-35].
17.
Ciavarella v Balmer (1983) 153 CLR 438 at 446; 48 ALR 407.
18.
Suisse Atlantique Société d’Armement Maritime SA v NV Rotterdamsche Kolen Centrale [1967] 1 AC 361 at 397.
19.
Bremer Vulkan Schiffbau und Maschinenfabrik v South India Shipping Corp Ltd [1981] AC 909 at 980, 981.
20.
See Jane Swanton, ‘Discharge of Contracts for Breach’ (1981) 13 MULR 69.
21.
See [31-04].
22.
See further [30-12], [30-24].
23.
See, eg Antaios Compania Naviera SA v Salen Rederierna AB [1985] AC 191.
24.
See, eg Rawson v Hobbs (1961) 107 CLR 466; Afovos Shipping Co SA v Pagnan [1983] 1 WLR 195. See also Sanders v Snell (1998) 196 CLR 329; 157 ALR 491 (no entitlement to make payment to employee in lieu of notice).
25.
Eriksson v Whalley [1971] 1 NSWLR 397.
26.
See, eg Rawson v Hobbs (1961) 107 CLR 466. Cf [31-04].
27.
ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, ss 16(2), 35(2); NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, ss 16(2), 34(2); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, ss 16(2), 34(2); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, ss 14(2), 33(2); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, ss 11(2), 31(2); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, ss 16(2), 36(2); Vic: Goods Act 1958, ss 16(2), 38(2); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, ss 11(2), 31(2).
28.
See J W Carter, ‘Party Autonomy and Statutory Regulation: Sale of Goods’ (1993) 6 JCL 93; R E Speidel, ‘Buyer’s Remedies of Rejection and Cancellation under the UCC and the Convention’ (1993) 6 JCL 131.
29.
See [14-23].
30.
See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, ch 5.
31.
Wallis v Pratt [1910] 2 KB 1003 at 1012 (adopted [1911] AC 394).
32.
Gumland Property Holdings Pty Ltd v Duffy Bros Fruit Market (Campbelltown) Pty Ltd (2008) 234 CLR 237 at 259; 244 ALR 1 at 18; [2008] HCA 10 at [58]. Cf Mardorf Peach & Co Ltd v Attica Sea Carriers Corp of Liberia [1977] AC 850. See further [30-12].
33.
(1938) 38 SR (NSW) 632 at 642 (reversed on other grounds sub nom Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd (1938) 61 CLR 286).
34.
See [13-04].
35.
[1962] 2 QB 26. And see Ankar Pty Ltd v National Westminster Finance (Australia) Ltd (1987) 162
CLR 549; 70 ALR 641. 36.
See [30-50].
37.
[1974] AC 235 (see Roger Brownsword (1974) 37 MLR 104).
38.
Honner v Ashton (1979) 1 BPR 9478 at 9483.
39.
See [12-05]–[12-23].
40.
But see Cehave NV v Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH (The Hansa Nord) [1976] QB 44 at 58.
41.
See [12-18].
42.
See generally [31-01]–[31-07], [31-08]–[31-10]. And see [12-12].
43.
[1971] 1 QB 164. See D W Greig, ‘Condition — Or Warranty?’ (1973) 89 LQR 93.
44.
(1938) 38 SR (NSW) 632 at 641–2.
45.
Sub nom Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd (1938) 61 CLR 286.
46.
(1951) 83 CLR 322.
47.
See Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd v Luna Park (NSW) Ltd (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 632 at 641 (reversed on other grounds sub nom Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd (1938) 61 CLR 286).
48.
At least as regards time; see [30-51].
49.
As in DTR Nominees Pty Ltd v Mona Homes Pty Ltd (1978) 138 CLR 423; 19 ALR 223.
50.
(1938) 61 CLR 286. See also BS & N Ltd (BVI) v Micado Shipping Ltd (Malta) (The Seaflower) [2001] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 341.
51.
See DTR Nominees Pty Ltd v Mona Homes Pty Ltd (1978) 138 CLR 423.
52.
[1974] AC 235 (see also [30-12]).
53.
(1951) 83 CLR 322 (see [30-15]). See also Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711 (see [30-52]).
54.
(1876) 1 QBD 183 at 188.
55.
[1962] 2 QB 26 at 69.
56.
See, eg Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd [1962] 2 QB 26 (see [30-58]).
57.
[1976] QB 44.
58.
Bentsen v Taylor Sons & Co (No 2) [1893] 2 QB 274 at 281 per Bowen LJ. And see Ankar Pty Ltd v National Westminster Finance (Australia) Ltd (1987) 162 CLR 549.
59.
Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711 (see [30-52]).
60.
See Roger Brownsword, ‘Retrieving Reasons, Retrieving Rationality? A New Look at the Right to Withdraw for Breach of Contract’ (1992) 5 JCL 83.
61.
Friedlander v Bank of Australasia (1909) 8 CLR 85 at 96.
62.
(1987) 162 CLR 549 (see J W Carter and J C Phillips (1988) 1 JCL 70). See also Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711 at 720.
63.
L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd [1974] AC 235 (see [30-12], [30-16]).
64.
[1962] 2 QB 26 at 62.
65.
See, eg Trans Trust SPRL v Danubian Trading Co Ltd [1952] 2 QB 297.
66.
See generally [30-48]–[30-64].
67.
See, eg Harrington v Browne (1917) 23 CLR 297.
68.
Bowes v Shand (1877) 2 App Cas 455; Bowes v Chaleyer (1923) 32 CLR 159. See also [11-19] (implied condition).
69.
See Reardon Smith Line Ltd v Yngvar Hansen-Tangen [1976] 1 WLR 989 at 998.
70.
See, eg Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH v Vanden Avenne-Izegem PVBA [1978] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 109.
71.
[1893] 2 QB 274 (see [31-09]).
72.
[1893] 2 QB 274 at 281.
73.
See, eg Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711 (see [30-52]); Ankar Pty Ltd v National Westminster Finance (Australia) Ltd (1987) 162 CLR 549 (see [30-17]); Compagnie Commerciale Sucres et Denrées v C Czarnikow Ltd [1990] 1 WLR 1337 (see G H Treitel [1991] LMCLQ 147; Malcolm Clarke [1991] CLJ 29; J W Carter (1992) 5 JCL 60).
74.
(1923) 32 CLR 159 at 196.
75.
See [13-14].
76.
See [13-14], [14-22]–[14-25].
77.
(1931) 45 CLR 359.
78.
See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, ch 6; Lord Devlin, ‘The Treatment of Breach of Contract’ [1966] CLJ 192.
79.
[1976] QB 44.
80.
For example, a no-rejection clause in a contract for the sale of goods which requires the buyer to accept deductions from the price in respect of quality defects up to, say, 15 per cent of the goods.
81.
See, eg Bunge SA v Kruse [1980] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 142.
82.
See [13-09].
83.
See further [30-24], [30-25].
84.
See [29-15].
85.
Cf L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd [1974] AC 235 (see [12-12], [30-12], [30-16]).
86.
See, eg Decro-Wall International SA v Practitioners in Marketing Ltd [1971] 1 WLR 361 at 368.
87.
See, eg Direct Acceptance Finance Ltd v Cumberland Furnishing Pty Ltd [1965] NSWR 1504 at 1511. Although this is the criterion stated in United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods 1980, Art 25, the expression has a broader meaning there (and is more easily satisfied) than under the general law.
88.
See [30-26]–[30-27].
89.
But cf Beale, Remedies for Breach of Contract, 1980, p 45.
90.
[1962] 2 QB 26.
91.
See [33-43]–[33-48] (self-induced frustration).
92.
Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd [1962] 2 QB 26 at 66; Direct Acceptance Finance Ltd v Cumberland Furnishing Pty Ltd [1965] NSWR 1504 at 1511.
93.
Lion White Lead Ltd v Rogers (1918) 25 CLR 533 at 55. See also W & S Pollock & Co v Macrae 1922 SC (HL) 192 at 200.
94.
Carr v J A Berriman Pty Ltd (1953) 89 CLR 327.
95.
The promisee may be in a stronger position if the contract is construed as ‘entire’; see [28-24], [28-
32]. 96.
Federal Commerce and Navigation Co Ltd v Molena Alpha Inc [1979] AC 757, a case of anticipatory breach (see [30-35]).
97.
Compare the facts in Harbutt’s ‘Plasticine’ Ltd v Wayne Tank and Pump Co Ltd [1970] 1 QB 447 (overruled in Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827).
98.
Contrast the fact situation in Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd [1962] 2 QB 26 (see [30-58]).
99.
(2007) 233 CLR 115; 241 ALR 88; [2007] HCA 61 (see Dharmananda Kanaga and Anthony Papamatheos (2008) 124 LQR 373). See J W Carter, ‘Intermediate Terms Arrive in Australia and Singapore’ (2008) 24 JCL 226.
100. (2007) 233 CLR 115 at 133; 241 ALR 88 at 96; [2007] HCA 61 at [34]. See also (2007) 233 CLR 115 at 134; 241 ALR 88 at 99; [2007] HCA 61 at [38]. 101. (2007) 233 CLR 115 at 147; 241 ALR 88 at 110; [2007] HCA 61 at [71]. 102. (2007) 233 CLR 115 at 147, 160; 241 ALR 88 at 110, 121; [2007] HCA 61 at [71], [120]. 103. [1976] QB 44 (see F M B Reynolds (1976) 92 LQR 17; Tony Weir [1976] CLJ 33 and [13-13]). See also Glencore International AG v Ryan (The Beursgracht) [2002] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 574. 104. Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd [1962] 2 QB 26 at 38, 57, 64, 72. 105. Cf United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods 1980, Art 25 (‘unless the party in breach did not foresee and a reasonable person of the same kind in the same circumstances would not have foreseen such a result’). 106. Cf Farnworth Finance Facilities Ltd v Attryde [1970] 1 WLR 1053. 107. See [30-58]. 108. Cf Astley Industrial Trust Ltd v Grimley [1963] 1 WLR 584 at 599. An express term may oblige the promisee to provide an opportunity to remedy the breach (eg L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd [1974] AC 235) or the promisee may be obliged to do so by statute (see [31-04]). See also [30-59] (delay). 109. Carr v J A Berriman Pty Ltd (1953) 89 CLR 327 at 349. 110. See [31-05]. 111. For analysis of the development of the law see Samuel Williston, ‘Repudiation of Contracts’ (1901) 14 Harv LR 317 and 421; Sir Michael Mustill, ‘Anticipatory Breach’, Butterworth Lectures 1989–90, 1990. 112. See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, ch 7. 113. British & Beningtons Ltd v North Western Cachar Tea Co Ltd [1923] AC 48 at 63; Peter Turnbull & Co Pty Ltd v Mundus Trading Co (Australasia) Pty Ltd (1954) 90 CLR 235 at 253; Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385; 88 ALR 413. 114. See, eg English and Australian Copper Co Ltd v Johnson (1911) 13 CLR 490 at 497; Dainford Ltd v Smith (1985) 155 CLR 342 at 366; 58 ALR 285. 115. See generally [29-13]–[29-17]. 116. See [28-11]. 117. Hensley v Reschke (1914) 18 CLR 452 at 467; Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385. 118. See [30-30]. 119. See J W Carter, ‘Anticipatory Breach’ in Current Developments in International Transfers of Goods
and Services, 1994, p 227; Qiao Liu, ‘Inferring Future Breach: Towards a Unifying Test of Anticipatory Breach of Contract’ [2007] CLJ 574. 120. See [30-06]. See also [29-01]. 121. See, eg Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati [1957] 2 QB 401; Progressive Mailing House Pty Ltd v Tabali Pty Ltd (1985) 157 CLR 17; 57 ALR 609. 122. Heyman v Darwins Ltd [1942] AC 356 at 382; Peter Turnbull & Co Pty Ltd v Mundus Trading Co (Australasia) Pty Ltd (1954) 90 CLR 235. Cf Martin v Stout [1925] AC 359 at 368. 123. Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v Watson (1946) 72 CLR 435; White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor [1962] AC 413. 124. See also [29-01]. But see Michael v Hart & Co [1902] 1 KB 482 at 490. 125. Honner v Ashton (1979) 1 BPR 9478 at 9492. 126. See, eg Hochster v De la Tour (1853) 2 E & B 678; 118 ER 922 (see [30-37]). 127. See, eg Federal Commerce and Navigation Co Ltd v Molena Alpha Inc [1979] AC 757 at 779, 783, 785. 128. See the discussion by McHugh JA in Wight v Foran (1987) 11 NSWLR 470 at 487–8 (reversed without reference to the point sub nom Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385). 129. Denmark Productions Ltd v Boscobel Productions Ltd [1969] 1 QB 699 at 731. 130. Maredelanto Compania Naviera SA v Bergbau-Handel GmbH (The Mihalis Angelos) [1971] 1 QB 164 at 196. 131. Bradley v H Newsom Sons & Co [1919] AC 16 at 33; Larratt v Bankers and Traders Insurance Co Ltd (1941) 41 SR (NSW) 215 at 222. But see Lawrence Vold, ‘Withdrawal of Repudiation after Anticipatory Breach of Contract’ (1926) 5 Texas LR 9. 132. Cort v Ambergate etc Railway Co (1851) 17 QB 127 at 145; 117 ER 1229 at 1236; Francis Dawson, ‘Metaphors and Anticipatory Breach of Contract’ [1981] CLJ 83. 133. Frost v Knight (1872) LR 7 Ex 111 at 114. See J C Vyn, ‘Anticipatory Repudiation Under the Uniform Commercial Code: Interpretation, Analysis, and Problems’ (1976) 30 Southwestern LJ 601. 134. Woodar Investment Development Ltd v Wimpey Construction UK Ltd [1980] 1 WLR 277 at 296–7. 135. Maredelanto Compania Naviera SA v Bergbau-Handel GmbH (The Mihalis Angelos) [1971] 1 QB 164. 136. See Moschi v Lep Air Services Ltd [1973] AC 331 at 349–50. 137. Except, perhaps, in cases where the repudiation makes performance impossible; see, eg Southern Foundries (1926) Ltd v Shirlaw [1940] AC 701 at 717. 138. Martin v Stout [1925] AC 359 at 364; Ogle v Comboyuro Investments Pty Ltd (1976) 136 CLR 444 at 451; 9 ALR 309. 139. See [36-04]. 140. See [34-07]. 141. Maredelanto Compania Naviera SA v Bergbau-Handel GmbH (The Mihalis Angelos) [1971] 1 QB 164. 142. See [36-03], [36-05], [36-17]. 143. Cehave NV v Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH (The Hansa Nord) [1976] QB 44 at 59. 144. (1982) 149 CLR 620 at 626; 42 ALR 305.
145. See also [13-15]. 146. See [30-26], [30-27]. 147. Decro-Wall International SA v Practitioners in Marketing Ltd [1971] 1 WLR 361 at 380 (approved Federal Commerce and Navigation Co Ltd v Molena Alpha Inc [1979] AC 757); Honner v Ashton (1979) 1 BPR 9478 at 9491. 148. Direct Acceptance Finance Ltd v Cumberland Furnishing Pty Ltd [1965] NSWR 1504 at 1510; Walters v Cooper [1967] VR 583 at 587. 149. [1979] AC 757 (see J W Carter [1979] CLJ 270). 150. See [30-41]. 151. See also Forslind v Bechely-Crundall 1922 SC (HL) 173 at 179; Stevenson v Hook (1956) 73 WN (NSW) 307 at 313. See also [30-38]. 152. See [1979] AC 757 at 778, 783, 785. See also Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati [1957] 2 QB 401; Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385 at 395, 416, 441. A contrary dictum in Afovos Shipping Co SA v Pagnan [1983] 1 WLR 195 at 203 is best explained by the fact that the term was a ‘condition’ merely in the sense that there was an express (contractual) right to terminate in respect of any breach of the term. 153. Statutes such as the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW) may apply if the parties have excluded the doctrine. See generally Chapter 24. 154. (1990) 92 ALR 601 (affirmed on other grounds sub nom Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64; 104 ALR 1). Contrast Leslie Shipping Co v Welstead [1921] 3 KB 420; Concut Pty Ltd v Worrell (2000) 176 ALR 693 at 699–700. 155. However, when analysing whether such a repudiation had occurred Davies J does seem to have considered conduct after the arrival of the time for performance, which suggests that the clause did not go quite so far as he had indicated. 156. See [30-65]–[30-66]. 157. See, eg Diamond v Moore (1931) 45 CLR 159; Laurinda Pty Ltd v Capalaba Park Shopping Centre Pty Ltd (1989) 166 CLR 623; 85 ALR 183. Cf Leitz Leeholme Stud Pty Ltd v Robinson [1977] 2 NSWLR 544. 158. See J W Carter and Jennifer Hill, ‘Repudiation of Leases: Further Developments’ [1986] Conv 262; Ken Mackie, ‘Repudiation of Leases’ (1988) 62 ALJ 53. 159. (1985) 157 CLR 17. See also Apriaden Pty Ltd v Seacrest Pty Ltd (2000) 12 VR 319; Gumland Property Holdings Pty Ltd v Duffy Bros Fruit Market (Campbelltown) Pty Ltd (2008) 234 CLR 237 at 259; 244 ALR 1 at 18; [2008] HCA 10 at [58]. The position in England is not entirely clear. See Total Oil Great Britain Ltd v Thompson Garages (Biggin Hill) Ltd [1972] 1 QB 318. But cf [33-35]–[3336] (frustration). 160. See [36-15]. 161. See [31-14]. See also [31-13] (relief under equitable principles). 162. See further [36-15]. Where the conduct of the lessor is interpreted as a surrender of the lease, the lessor may not be able to claim damages. See Buchanan v Byrnes (1906) 3 CLR 704 (as interpreted in Tabali); Wood Factory Pty Ltd v Kiritos Pty Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 105. 163. Pennicott v Pennicott (1936) 30 Tas LR 111 at 116; Mackenzie v Rees (1941) 65 CLR 1 at 15 (see [30-65]); Geo Thompson (Aust) Pty Ltd v Vittadello [1978] VR 199 at 202. 164. See [28-16]. 165. See generally [36-16].
166. See Direct Acceptance Finance Ltd v Cumberland Furnishing Pty Ltd [1965] NSWR 1504 at 1511. 167. Bremer Vulkan Schiffbau und Maschinenfabrik v South India Shipping Corp Ltd [1981] AC 909 at 980. 168. [2002] 1 AC 185 (see Elisabeth Peden and J W Carter (2000) 16 JCL 275). 169. [2002] 1 AC 185 at 193. The other members of the House of Lords agreed. See also Mullins v Laughton [2003] Ch 250. 170. See [1999] Ch 1 at 9. See also Johnson v Snaddon [1999] VSC 243 (affirmed without reference to the point [2001] VSCA 91). 171. See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, ch 8. 172. (1853) 2 E & B 678; 118 ER 922. See Paul Mitchell, ‘Hochster v De La Tour (1853)’ in Mitchell and Mitchell, eds, Landmark Cases in the Law of Contract, 2008, p 135. 173. (1872) LR 7 Ex 111. See also Psaltis v Schultz (1948) 76 CLR 547 but note that the action for breach of promise was abolished by s 111A of the Marriage Act 1961 (Cth). 174. See, eg Mersey Steel and Iron Co Ltd v Naylor Benzon & Co (1884) 9 App Cas 434. 175. See, eg Adami v Maison de Luxe Ltd (1924) 35 CLR 143 at 151; Mathieson v Sunshine Wrappings Pty Ltd (1962) 80 WN (NSW) 1312. 176. See Suisse Atlantique Société d’Armement Maritime SA v NV Rotterdamsche Kolen Centrale [1967] 1 AC 361 at 394, 429, 435. 177. [1979] AC 757 (see [30-35]). 178. (1951) 83 CLR 322 (see [30-15]). 179. (1874) LR 9 CP 208 at 213 (approved Mersey Steel and Iron Co Ltd v Naylor Benzon & Co (1884) 9 App Cas 434). See also Laurinda Pty Ltd v Capalaba Park Shopping Centre Pty Ltd (1989) 166 CLR 623 at 647–8. 180. Spettabile Consorzio Veneziano di Armamento e Navigazione v Northumberland Shipbuilding Co Ltd (1919) 121 LT 628 at 635 per Atkin LJ. See also Contractual Remedies Act 1979 (NZ), s 7; Restatement (2d) Contracts (1979), §250; United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods 1980, Art 72; [30-35]. 181. ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 35(2); NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 34(2); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 34(2); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 33(2); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 31(2); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 36(2); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 38(2); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 31(2). 182. (1908) 14 Com Cas 25 at 29. 183. See Shevill v Builders Licensing Board (1982) 149 CLR 620 at 630. 184. [1979] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 450. See also International Leasing Corp (Vic) Ltd v Aiken [1967] 2 NSWR 427 (persistent breach by lessee of goods). 185. Contrast Mersey Steel and Iron Co Ltd v Naylor Benzon & Co (1884) 9 App Cas 434 (see [30-41]). 186. [1934] 1 KB 148 at 157. See also Hammer v Coca-Cola [1962] NZLR 723 at 725–6. 187. Contrast Simpson v Surman (1922) 24 WALR 79; Robert A Munro & Co Ltd v Meyer [1930] 2 KB 312. 188. See, eg Summers v The Commonwealth (1918) 25 CLR 144 (affirmed (1919) 26 CLR 180). 189. (1938) 61 CLR 286. 190. [1940] 3 All ER 60 at 72.
191. [1979] AC 757 (see [30-35]). 192. Ogle v Comboyuro Investments Pty Ltd (1976) 136 CLR 444 at 453. 193. See, eg White Trucks Pty Ltd v Riley (1948) 66 WN (NSW) 101. 194. White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor [1962] AC 413 (see [37-20]). 195. See, eg Ross T Smyth & Co Ltd v T D Bailey Son & Co [1940] 3 All ER 60 at 72; Laurinda Pty Ltd v Capalaba Park Shopping Centre Pty Ltd (1989) 166 CLR 623 at 647–8. 196. (1968) 71 SR (NSW) 126 at 150. See also Carr v J A Berriman Pty Ltd (1953) 89 CLR 327 at 351; Dainford Ltd v Smith (1985) 155 CLR 342 at 366; Laurinda Pty Ltd v Capalaba Park Shopping Centre Pty Ltd (1989) 166 CLR 623 at 633–4, 644, 657–8. 197. [1980] 1 WLR 277 (see J W Carter [1980] CLJ 256; Andrew Nicol and Rick Rawlings (1980) 43 MLR 696; Peter Butt (1981) 55 ALJ 231). For discussion from the renegotiation perspective see J W Carter, ‘The Renegotiation of Contracts’ (1998) 13 JCL 185. See also H O Hunter, ‘Commentary on “The Renegotiation of Contracts”’ (1998) 13 JCL 205. 198. (1884) 9 App Cas 434. 199. Dainford Ltd v Smith (1985) 155 CLR 342 at 365–6. See also Green v Sommerville (1979) 141 CLR 594; 27 ALR 351. Cf Nina’s Bar Bistro Pty Ltd v MBE Corp (Sydney) Pty Ltd [1984] 3 NSWLR 613 at 615. And see R B S Macfarlan (1985) 1 Aust Bar Rev 37. 200. Contrast DTR Nominees Pty Ltd v Mona Homes Pty Ltd (1978) 138 CLR 423. 201. (1938) 61 CLR 286 (see [30-16]). 202. [1979] AC 757 (see [30-35]). 203. See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, ch 9. 204. See, eg Hoad v Swan (1920) 28 CLR 258 at 264. 205. [1957] 2 QB 401 at 437. See also Bell v Scott (1922) 30 CLR 387 at 395–6. 206. Synge v Synge [1894] 1 QB 466; Schaefer v Schuhmann [1972] AC 572; Barns v Barns (2003) 214 CLR 169 at 206–7; 196 ALR 65 at 93. 207. Brace v Calder [1895] 2 QB 253. See also Ogdens Ltd v Nelson [1905] AC 109. Cf Re Palmdale Insurance Ltd [1982] VR 921. 208. (1989) 168 CLR 385 (see [30-47]). Cf Ellen v Topp (1851) 6 Ex 424; 155 ER 609. 209. British & Beningtons Ltd v North Western Cachar Tea Co Ltd [1923] AC 48 at 72; Honner v Ashton (1979) 1 BPR 9478 at 9494. See Francis Dawson, ‘Waiver of Conditions Precedent on a Repudiation’ (1980) 96 LQR 239. 210. [1957] 2 QB 401. 211. (1961) 107 CLR 466. Contrast Bell v Scott (1922) 30 CLR 387. 212. See, eg Winterton Constructions Pty Ltd v Hambros Australia Ltd (1992) 111 ALR 649. For a suggestion that the test is too strict see Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385 at 425. 213. See [31-03]. 214. See Braithwaite v Foreign Hardwood Co [1905] 2 KB 543; Taylor v Oakes Roncoroni & Co (1922) 27 Com Cas 261; M C Lloyd, ‘Ready and Willing to Perform: The Problem of Prospective Inability in the Law of Contract’ (1974) 37 MLR 121. 215. British & Beningtons Ltd v North Western Cachar Tea Co Ltd [1923] AC 48 at 70; Sunbird Plaza Pty Ltd v Maloney (1988) 166 CLR 245 at 278; 77 ALR 205; Fercometal SARL v Mediterranean Shipping Co SA [1989] AC 788; Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385.
216. Sunbird Plaza Pty Ltd v Maloney (1988) 166 CLR 245 (see John Harris (1988) 1 JCL 177). On the question of damages see [36-17]. 217. See J W Carter, ‘The Embiricos Principle and the Law of Anticipatory Breach’ (1984) 47 MLR 422. 218. See Millars’ Karri and Jarrah Co (1902) v Weddel Turner & Co (1908) 14 Com Cas 25 at 29 (see [30-38]). 219. See [33-25]–[33-27]. 220. See Bell v Scott (1922) 30 CLR 387 at 392 (termination justified if it is ‘quite clear’ that the vendor has no title). 221. [1957] 2 QB 401 at 449. 222. See [30-33]. 223. See [36-17]. 224. See [36-17]. 225. This is the approach under Uniform Commercial Code (US), §2-609(1). 226. But see J W Carter, ‘Suspending Contract Performance for Breach’, in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995, p 485. 227. See [28-39]. 228. See Laurinda Pty Ltd v Capalaba Park Shopping Centre Pty Ltd (1989) 166 CLR 623 (see Peter Butt (1989) 63 ALJ 773). 229. See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, §§7-46–7-68. 230. See [30-30]. 231. See [35-02]. 232. See [34-07]. 233. See Frost v Knight (1872) LR 7 Ex 111 at 112. See further [30-47]. 234. Guy-Pell v Foster [1930] 2 Ch 169. 235. Cohen & Co v Ockerby & Co Ltd (1917) 24 CLR 288 at 298. The basis would seem to be estoppel or change of position in reliance on the repudiation. See Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385; Austral Standard Cables Pty Ltd v Walker Nominees Pty Ltd (1992) 26 NSWLR 524 at 533, 540; Restatement (2d) Contracts (1979), §256(1); A M Squillante, ‘Anticipatory Repudiation and Retraction’ (1973) 7 Valparaiso ULR 373. 236. Heyman v Darwins Ltd [1942] AC 356 at 399. 237. See [32-01]–[32-05]. 238. See further [36-13], [37-25]. 239. See J W Carter, ‘The Higher Altitudes of Contract Law’ [1989] LMCLQ 81. 240. (1989) 168 CLR 385 (see also [30-42]). See J W Carter (1990) 3 JCL 70; Andrew Beech, ‘Terminating a Contract: Dispensing with the Requirement of Readiness and Willingness’ (1992) 5 JCL 47. See also Sibbles v Highfern Pty Ltd (1987) 164 CLR 214; 76 ALR 13. 241. (1923) 32 CLR 159. 242. (1954) 90 CLR 235 (see R A Blackburn (1955) 71 LQR 473). 243. See, eg Woodar Investment Development Ltd v Wimpey Construction UK Ltd [1980] 1 WLR 277 at 290. Cf Fullers’ Theatres Ltd v Musgrove (1923) 31 CLR 524 at 549.
244. See, eg Mahoney v Lindsay (1980) 33 ALR 601 (see J W Carter (1982) 56 ALJ 251); Austral Standard Cables Pty Ltd v Walker Nominees Pty Ltd (1992) 26 NSWLR 524; Murphy v Zamonex Pty Ltd (1993) 31 NSWLR 439 at 454. 245. They begin with Jones v Barkley (1781) 2 Doug 684; 99 ER 434. 246. See [32-01]. 247. See, eg Braithwaite v Foreign Hardwood Co [1905] 2 KB 543. Contrast Moschi v Lep Air Services Ltd [1973] AC 331 at 356. 248. [1989] AC 788 (see Geoffrey Marston [1988] CLJ 340). 249. See [30-45]. 250. Gaudron J was of the view that the purchasers had not by their conduct lost the right to rely on the essentiality of the time set for completion. 251. [1951] 1 KB 417 at 421. 252. [1962] 2 QB 26 (see [30-58]). 253. See [29-07]–[29-12]. 254. See [29-11]. 255. See [13-02]. 256. United Scientific Holdings Ltd v Burnley BC [1978] AC 904. 257. Ciavarella v Balmer [1983] 2 NSWLR 439 at 450 (affirmed (1983) 153 CLR 438). 258. Lindgren, Time in the Performance of Contracts, 2nd ed, 1982, Chapter 3. 259. In Citicorp Australia Ltd v Hendry (1985) 4 NSWLR 22 at 27 Mahoney JA suggested that this expression does not define the nature of the terms to which it extends so much as exclude the equitable treatment (see [29-07]–[29-12]) of time stipulations. 260. Exercise of the right may, however, be affected by a purchaser’s ability to apply for relief against forfeiture; see [31-13]. 261. See Lombard North Central Plc v Butterworth [1987] QB 527. 262. See United Scientific Holdings Ltd v Burnley BC [1978] AC 904; Raineri v Miles [1981] AC 1050 (approving Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th ed, 1974, Vol 9, para 481). 263. See, eg Lock v Bell [1931] 1 Ch 35. 264. Brien v Dwyer (1978) 141 CLR 378; 22 ALR 485; Damon Compania Naviera SA v Hapag-Lloyd International SA (The Blankenstein) [1985] 1 WLR 435. 265. See, eg Shevill v Builders Licensing Board (1982) 149 CLR 620 at 627. 266. (1876) 1 QBD 183. 267. See Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711 at 720, 727 (approving Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th ed, 1974, Vol 9, para 482). 268. Bowes v Shand (1877) 2 App Cas 455; Harrington v Browne (1917) 23 CLR 297; Bowes v Chaleyer (1923) 32 CLR 159. 269. See ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 15(1); NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 15(1); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 15(1); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 13(1); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 10(1); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 15; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 15; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 10(1). 270. Pavia & Co SpA v Thurmann-Nielsen [1952] 2 QB 84. 271. Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711 at 715 per Lord Wilberforce.
272. [1981] 1 WLR 711 (see F M B Reynolds (1981) 97 LQR 541; J W Carter [1981] CLJ 219). 273. Cf Ankar Pty Ltd v National Westminster Finance (Australia) Ltd (1987) 162 CLR 549 at 562. 274. See Phibro Energy AG v Nissho Iwai Corp (The Honam Jade) [1991] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 38, where delay had a fundamental effect on the contract (see J W Carter (1992) 5 JCL 60). Contrast Torvald Klaveness A/S v Arni Maritime Corp [1994] 1 WLR 1465 at 1476. 275. See, eg United Scientific Holdings Ltd v Burnley BC [1978] AC 904 (see [29-12]). 276. McDougall v Aeromarine of Emsworth Ltd [1958] 1 WLR 1126. But see British and Commonwealth Holdings Plc v Quadrex Holdings Inc [1989] QB 842 at 857 (dictum that an implied time stipulation can never be essential) (not followed on another point in Behzadi v Shaftesbury Hotels Ltd [1992] Ch 1). 277. See Rian Financial Services Ltd v Alfred Investments Projects Pty Ltd (1988) NSW Conv R ¶55-400 at 57,698 and [30-59]–[30-64]. 278. See [30-55]–[30-56]. 279. See, eg Geipel v Smith (1872) LR 7 QB 404 at 411, 413, 414; Louinder v Leis (1982) 149 CLR 509 at 526. See also Neeta (Epping) Pty Ltd v Phillips (1974) 131 CLR 286 at 302; 3 ALR 151 (‘gross and protracted’). 280. For example, because it indicates a refusal to perform the contract: Howe v Smith (1884) 27 Ch D 89; Satellite Estate Pty Ltd v Jaquet (1968) 71 SR (NSW) 126 at 150. 281. MacAndrew v Chapple (1866) LR 1 CP 643 at 648; Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati [1957] 2 QB 401 (a case of anticipatory breach). 282. See Stanton v Richardson (1872) LR 7 CP 421 (affirmed (1874) LR 9 CP 390; (1875) 45 LJQB 78). 283. It is arguable, however, that this is merely an instance of the notice procedure considered [3059]–[30-64]. 284. Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati [1957] 2 QB 401 at 435. 285. Cf [30-43]. 286. [1955] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 303. 287. Lindgren, Time in the Performance of Contracts, 2nd ed, 1982, para 424. 288. Michael Realty Pty Ltd v Carr [1977] 1 NSWLR 553 at 567. But see Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati [1957] 2 QB 401 at 448. 289. Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd [1962] 2 QB 26. 290. [1962] 2 QB 26. See Donal Nolan, ‘Hongkong Fir Shipping Co v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd, The Hongkong Fir (1961)’ in Mitchell and Mitchell, eds, Landmark Cases in the Law of Contract, 2008, p 269. 291. See Astley Industrial Trust Ltd v Grimley [1963] 1 WLR 584 at 598–9. 292. See Lindgren, Time in the Performance of Contracts, 2nd ed, 1982, Chapter 4; Peter Butt, ‘The Modern Law of Notices to Complete’ (1985) 59 ALJ 260. 293. See [29-11]. 294. See [30-55]. For the ability to rely on unreasonable delay where the notice procedure fails see Angela Sydenham, ‘Unreasonable Delay — Something of a Long- Stop on the Failure of a Notice to Complete?’ [1980] Conv 19. 295. Green v Sevin (1879) 13 Ch D 589 at 599; Louinder v Leis (1982) 149 CLR 509. 296. Louinder v Leis (1982) 149 CLR 509. See also Neeta (Epping) Pty Ltd v Phillips (1974) 131 CLR
286 at 299; Behzadi v Shaftesbury Hotels Ltd [1992] Ch 1 (see Charles Harpum [1991] CLJ 40; Diane Skapinker (1992) 5 JCL 67). 297. See Raineri v Miles [1981] AC 1050. 298. Louinder v Leis (1982) 149 CLR 509. 299. Falconer v Wilson [1973] 2 NSWLR 131 at 145; Laurinda Pty Ltd v Capalaba Park Shopping Centre Pty Ltd (1989) 166 CLR 623. 300. Stickney v Keeble [1915] AC 386; Wendt v Bruce (1931) 45 CLR 245 at 253; Sindel v Georgiou (1984) 154 CLR 661; 55 ALR 1. 301. See Laurinda Pty Ltd v Capalaba Park Shopping Centre Pty Ltd (1989) 166 CLR 623. Cf O’Brien v Dawson (1941) 41 SR (NSW) 295 at 304 (affirmed on other grounds (1942) 66 CLR 18). 302. Balog v Crestani (1975) 132 CLR 289; 6 ALR 29. 303. See Carr v J A Berriman Pty Ltd (1953) 89 CLR 327 at 348–9; United Scientific Holdings Ltd v Burnley BC [1978] AC 904 at 928; J E Stannard, ‘In the Contractual Last Chance Saloon: Notices Making Time of the Essence’ (2004) 120 LQR 137. Cf United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods 1980, Arts 49, 64. 304. Perri v Coolangatta Investments Pty Ltd (1982) 149 CLR 537; 41 ALR 441. 305. See Louinder v Leis (1982) 149 CLR 509. 306. See, eg Halkidis v Bugeia [1974] 1 NSWLR 423. There may be an express provision to this effect in the contract; see, eg Re Barr’s Contract [1956] 1 Ch 551 (not followed on another point in British and Commonwealth Holdings Plc v Quadrex Holdings Inc [1989] QB 842). 307. McNally v Waitzer [1981] 1 NSWLR 294. See Peter Butt, ‘Notices to Complete: “Ready, Able and Willing”’ [1982] Conv 62. 308. Neeta (Epping) Pty Ltd v Phillips (1974) 131 CLR 286 at 299. 309. See Ciavarella v Balmer [1983] 2 NSWLR 439 at 451. On appeal ((1983) 153 CLR 438), the High Court found it unnecessary to decide the matter. An even more lenient approach is suggested by Francis Dawson (1979) 8 NZULR 281 at 287. 310. Halfpenny v Wilson (1967) 87 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 547; Balog v Crestani (1975) 132 CLR 289 at 298. 311. See Dainford Ltd v Yulora Pty Ltd [1984] 1 NSWLR 546. 312. Louinder v Leis (1982) 149 CLR 509; Ciavarella v Balmer (1983) 153 CLR 438. 313. See Ciavarella v Balmer [1983] 2 NSWLR 439 at 450 (affirmed (1983) 153 CLR 438). 314. Ciavarella v Balmer (1983) 153 CLR 438 at 446. 315. Neeta (Epping) Pty Ltd v Phillips (1974) 131 CLR 286 at 299. 316. See J W Carter, ‘The Breach of Unilateral Contracts’ (1982) 11 Anglo-American L Rev 169. J W Carter, G J Tolhurst and Elisabeth Peden, ‘Developing the Intermediate Term’ (2006) 22 JCL 268. 317. See generally [3-49]–[3-50]. 318. See [28-36]. 319. See United Dominions Trust (Commercial) Ltd v Eagle Aircraft Services Ltd [1968] 1 WLR 74 at 83. 320. See Wright v Dean [1948] Ch 686. Cf Alpha Trading Ltd v Dunnshaw-Patten Ltd [1981] QB 290. 321. (1941) 65 CLR 1 at 15. See also Pennicott v Pennicott (1936) 30 Tas LR 111. American law generally favours the view that termination is not permitted. See Restatement (2d) Contracts (1979), §243 (no damages for total breach).
322. [1894] 1 QB 466. 323. See [30-36]. 324. [1973] AC 331. 325. (1973) 1 ALR 497; 47 ALJR 586. See also Progressive Mailing House Pty Ltd v Tabali Pty Ltd (1985) 157 CLR 17 at 44–6 (repudiation).
[page 726]
Chapter 31
Restrictions on Termination [31-01] Termination not automatic. In the 19th century it was reasonably common for the courts to say that where a condition precedent failed by reason of a breach of contract (or repudiation) the contract was ‘void’ or ‘at an end’.1 However, it is now clearly established that, unless the parties have expressly agreed to a contrary result, a breach of contract or repudiation of obligation does not automatically terminate the obligation of the parties to perform.2 Termination is a matter of election, to be made by the promisee.3 The contract of employment has been the subject of considerable discussion on this issue. In Australia the law has been settled for some time that a serious breach or repudiation, while frequently destructive of the master–servant relationship, does not automatically terminate the parties’ obligations.4 In England there was, until recently, support for the view that the contract of employment is exceptional in that either party may terminate the parties’ obligations by committing a serious breach or repudiation.5 And even in Gunton v Richmond-upon-Thames London BC,6 where a majority of the English Court of Appeal rejected the automatic termination theory, one member of the court suggested that termination occurs unless the other party can obtain the remedy of specific performance.7 In many cases this may be the practical result8 since, for example, a wrongfully dismissed employee cannot obtain specific performance, or convert an action for damages into a claim to recover wages merely by refusing to accept the employer’s repudiation.9 However, [page 727] this restriction on remedies does not justify special treatment of the contract of employment.10 An express provision for automatic termination which may operate on the
occurrence of a breach or repudiation is usually interpreted as giving rise to a right to terminate if and when the event occurs.11 Moreover, in Australia, clauses which provide for automatic termination in respect of events which may or may not, depending on the circumstances, be caused by one of the parties, are given a uniform treatment. This means that termination is not automatic even if the clause is triggered by an event which does not involve a breach.12 The restrictive treatment of automatic termination clauses is based on a rule of construction, namely, that the parties are presumed not to have intended the clause to operate so as to allow a promisor to rely on his or her own breach of duty, whether express or implied,13 as terminating the performance of the contract. The presumption will not apply if the clause can only operate in circumstances which do not involve a breach of contract, for example, a force majeure clause. Such a clause can be literally interpreted. Similarly, if the duty is owed to a third party the clause may be literally interpreted because the presumption will not apply.14 If the parties have expressly agreed for automatic termination in the case of breach, the presumption may be rebutted.15 But even here there may be scope for saying that the clause infringes a rule of public policy.
Election General Ideas [31-02] Election to terminate required.16 Because of the rule against automatic termination, the obligation of the parties to perform is not terminated unless and until the promisee elects to terminate the performance of the contract.17 No such right of election lies with the promisor, and the promisor cannot compel the promisee to exercise the right of election.18 [page 728] Unless the contract or a statutory provision provides to the contrary, the promisee may terminate at once; there is no obligation to allow the promisor further time in which to perform, or to afford the promisor an opportunity to remedy the breach.19
[31-03] Alternative grounds for termination.20 Although the promisee must justify termination, by reference to a legal right to do so, the promisee is not usually required to justify it on any ground given at the time of the election, provided that a valid ground then existed.21 If no ground was stated, the promisee may generally rely on any available ground. For example, in Rawson v Hobbs22 purchasers of a grazing property were unable to rely on a contractual right to terminate, but were permitted to rely on the vendors’ inability to perform even though this had not initially been put forward as a ground for termination. Again, in Maredelanto Compania Naviera SA v Bergbau-Handel GmbH (The Mihalis Angelos),23 the fact that charterers had relied on force majeure as a basis for termination did not prevent them justifying their election to terminate by reference to the shipowners’ breach of condition. There are restrictions on the ability to rely on an alternative ground for termination. These include the following: if a statutory provision precludes reliance on an alternative ground;24 if the promisee tries to invoke a contractual right, but has not complied with its requirements;25 if the promisee has failed to allow the promisor an opportunity to perform in accordance with the contract in circumstances where the promisor is entitled to be given the opportunity;26 or the promisee is estopped27 from relying on the alternative right.28 [31-04] Requirements of election to terminate. Basically, the requirements of election depend on the source of the right to terminate: [page 729] if the right to terminate is conferred by the common law the common law requirements apply; if the right is conferred by the terms of the contract the requirements stated in the contract apply; and if the right is conferred by statute the requirements are those stated in the legislation. Where the right is conferred by an express term, or by statute, and no specific requirements are stated, the common law rules apply. However, whatever the
source of the right to terminate, the terms of the contract, or a statutory provision, may have relevance. Whether the promisee has complied with the applicable requirements of election is an issue of fact.29 At common law the requirements of election involve unequivocal words or conduct evincing an election to terminate the performance of the contract. Generally, the promisee should communicate the election to the promisor,30 for example, by saying that the contract is being terminated on the ground of the promisor’s breach, or by issuing and serving a writ alleging termination.31 However, communication need not be by the promisee personally,32 and in some cases an act may be regarded as unequivocal even though there is no communication, as where a vendor of land resells to a third party after a repudiation by the purchaser of his or her obligations under the contract.33 However, equivocal words or conduct, even if communicated, will not amount to an election to terminate. For example, if the vendor in the example just given serves a writ on the purchaser which states alternative claims for (1) specific performance and (2) damages based on termination, there is no election because the vendor has not communicated any choice to the purchaser.34 Where the right to terminate is expressly conferred by the terms of the contract it will frequently require the promisee to give notice to the promisor. It would be wrong to say that the courts adopt a rigidly strict approach to contractual termination clauses.35 It is the substance of such a notice — what it conveys to the reasonable person in the position of the promisor — which matters. On this basis, the House of Lords held in Mannai Investment Co Pty Ltd v Eagle Star Life Assurance Co Ltd36 that even [page 730] if a termination notice contains errors (and therefore does not strictly comply with the requirements of the clause under which it is given) it may nevertheless be effective to terminate the contract. Thus, if the notice is clear, or so plain that a reasonable person would not be misled by it, the notice will not be vitiated by errors which it contains.37 Ultimately, the relevant test is, in Lord Steyn’s words,38 whether a reasonable person in the position of the recipient is ‘left in no doubt’ that the right has been exercised. The term may go further than this and require the promisee to allow the promisor an opportunity to remedy the breach within a specified time.39 Where
such a requirement exists the promisee must follow the procedure, and any termination before the expiry of the notice will be ineffective.40 Alternatively, the contract may oblige the promisee to give the promisor an opportunity to explain the breach, that is, to show cause why the contract should not be terminated for breach.41 The existence of such contractual requirements may preclude the promisee justifying the election by reference to an alternative ground, based on a common law and arising from the facts which also activate the contractual right. However, unless the contract constitutes an exhaustive code for termination,42 contractual rights are treated as additional bases for termination. Although there are relatively few statutes conferring a right to terminate for breach of contract, in many situations statutory provisions impinge on common law and contractual rights. For example, the forfeiture of a lease may be subject to a statutory requirement that the lessee be allowed to make reasonable compensation for the breach, and, if it is capable of remedy, to a reasonable time in which to remedy the breach.43 Other examples of statutory requirements can be found in ss 265 and 269 of the Australian Consumer Law.44 One feature of statutory requirements is worthy of note: they frequently prohibit the parties reaching any agreement by which the protection conferred by the statute could be avoided. The regulation of public sector employees’ contracts by statute frequently involves the presence of statutory codes governing dismissal. These may impose specific requirements for termination (dismissal) and [page 731] public law concepts of natural justice, such as the right to a hearing before dismissal. For example, in O’Rourke v Miller45 the High Court held that the dismissal of a probationary constable pursuant to statutory regulations was subject to the requirements of natural justice.
Election as a Restriction [31-05] Election to continue performance. So far we have been concerned with what the promisee must do in order to exercise the right to terminate. However, a
promisee may find that the right to terminate has been lost because the promisee has elected to pursue an alternative right, namely, to continue performance. Once a party is faced with a choice between terminating the contract and continuing with its performance,46 continuation is regarded as inconsistent with termination. As Lord Atkin explained in United Australia Ltd v Barclays Bank Ltd:47 [I]f a man is entitled to one of two inconsistent rights it is fitting that when with full knowledge he has done an unequivocal act showing that he has chosen the one he cannot pursue the other, which after the first choice is by reason of the inconsistency no longer his to choose.
It can be seen from this statement that a promisee must have knowledge, and also do some unequivocal act indicating a choice. ‘Knowledge’, in the context of breach, means that the promisee has at least knowledge of the circumstances which in law give rise to the right to terminate.48 However, it is sometimes said that the promisee must also have knowledge of his or her rights.49 In Coastal Estates Pty Ltd v Melevende,50 in the context of misrepresentation, a distinction was drawn between rights implied at common law (or equity) and express contractual rights. The sufficiency of knowledge of the circumstances was limited to the latter. In Sargent v ASL Developments Ltd51 the High Court adopted Lord Atkin’s statement of principle and did not decide whether the distinction drawn in Melevende should be followed in cases of breach. However, in Khoury v Government Insurance Office of New South Wales52 it was noted that where alternative rights ‘arise under the terms of one contract, a party may be held to have elected to affirm it, notwithstanding that he was unaware of [page 732] the actual right to avoid it’. Given that Khoury involved election in respect of a common law right it is arguable that the case has settled the position. However, there are cases which suggest a contrary approach.53 Whether a promisee’s words or conduct amount to an election to continue performance is a question of fact.54 They may take a variety of forms, but must be inconsistent with the exercise of the right to terminate. An express communication to the promisor, or the voluntary receipt of the promisor’s performance, such as the rent payable under a lease, will usually be regarded as unequivocal.55 But an extension of the time for performance by the promisor which is for a specified period, and coupled with a warning that failure to
perform within the extended time will lead to termination, is generally not an election to continue performance unless the promisor actually performs.56 [31-06] Finality of election. Generally, an election by the promisee, whether to terminate,57 or to continue performance,58 is final. Therefore, an election to continue performance is a permanent restriction on the right to terminate. However, an election in respect of one breach does not preclude reliance on an unknown or later breach by the promisor, provided, of course, that the other breach gives rise to a right to terminate.59 In order to do that it must be distinguishable from the first breach, and the failure to remedy a breach does not give rise to a second right to terminate unless it was a continuing, as distinct from a ‘once and for all’, breach.60 An election to continue performance does not prevent reliance on a subsequent repudiation by the promisor.61 Nor does the election prevent the promisee claiming damages for the breach. An election to continue performance is sometimes described as ‘waiver’ of the breach.62 Although the word is used in other senses as well,63 it does not usually signify that the promisee has waived all rights.64 Therefore, [page 733] waiver of a right to terminate does not prevent the promisee claiming damages in respect of the breach.65 [31-07] Equitable relief in favour of terminating party.66 A promisee may pursue alternative and inconsistent remedies without being held to have elected in favour of either, since, as Lord Atkin stated in United Australia Ltd v Barclays Bank Ltd,67 ‘no question of election [between remedies] arises until one or other claim has been brought to judgment’. Therefore, if the promisee pursues alternative claims of, say, damages based on termination and specific performance, and the court indicates that the promisee has made out a case for both remedies, the promisee must elect between them. Assuming that the promisee elects for the equitable remedy (specific performance in the example just given), the subsequent control of the dispute will be in the hands of the court. This constitutes a restriction on the promisee’s right to terminate arising from any failure by the promisor to comply with the court’s order.68
Estoppel [31-08] Estoppel as a restriction on the right to terminate. Estoppel may operate as a restriction on the right to terminate by precluding the promisee from setting up an election to terminate as a ground for discharge. The general purpose of estoppel,69 as Dixon J explained in Thompson v Palmer,70 is to prevent ‘an unjust departure by one person from an assumption adopted by another as the basis of some act or omission which, unless the assumption be adhered to, would operate to that other’s detriment’. Usually, in the context of the right to terminate for breach or repudiation, the assumption arises from a representation or promissory statement made by the person who enjoys the right of termination (the promisee under the contract) and acted on by the other party (the promisor under the contract). The representation need not be express, it may sometimes be implied from the promisee’s conduct.71 [page 734] In the present context the effect of estoppel is procedural: it does not result in loss of the right to terminate.72 Thus, unlike an election not to terminate, estoppel may be purely temporary. It follows that the estoppel may sometimes be avoided by notice by the promisee, advising the promisor of an intention to insist on its strict legal rights.73 Assuming that it has been validly given, but the requirements of the notice are not complied with, the promisee can insist on the right of termination in reliance on the promisor’s original breach or repudiation. There is no need to prove the existence of a fresh right to terminate. Two other important distinctions between principles of election and estoppel are that: (1) estoppel does not require knowledge of the right or the circumstances which gave rise to the right to terminate;74 and (2) detriment to the promisor, although essential to estoppel, is not an element of election.75 The word ‘waiver’ is sometimes used to describe the effect of estoppel,76 and the promisee regarded as having, temporarily at least, waived the right to terminate. The fact that the word is used in the context of both election and estoppel indicates that it has no fixed meaning. It does not appear to operate as a separate (distinct) doctrine.77
[31-09] Estoppel based on representation of fact. One form of estoppel relies on a factual representation to the party in breach (the promisor).78 The representation must come from the promisee and be inconsistent with exercise of the right to terminate. The representation must be unequivocal in nature, and reasonably relied upon by the promisor to its detriment.79 Injustice must also be established by the promisor,80 who must show that departure by the promisee from the assumption generated by the representation would, in the circumstances of the case, be unjust, unfair or unconscionable. The decision in Bentsen v Taylor Sons & Co (No 2)81 may be an example of estoppel by representation, although the court based its decision on ‘waiver’ and the facts are consistent with election, on the part of the promisees, to continue performance. The case concerned a voyage charterparty. A breach of condition was established because the vessel had [page 735] not, at the time of the contract, sailed ‘from a pitch pine port to the United Kingdom’. When they discovered the breach the charterers did not terminate the performance of the contract. Instead, they told the shipowner that when the vessel arrived at the port of loading they would protest and claim damages. This amounted to a representation to the shipowner that he was obliged to perform and that the contract was not discharged by termination for breach. However, on arrival the charterers refused to load and the shipowner claimed damages in respect of this refusal. The court held that the shipowner was entitled to succeed and refused to allow the charterers to set up termination as a defence to the claim. It would clearly have been unjust to permit the charterers to rely on their election after the shipowner had relied on their representation by proceeding to the port of loading. A promisee may be unable to assert a right to terminate even though there was no knowledge of the circumstances which gave rise to the right. For example, if a seller tenders shipping documents under a sale of goods contract, and these are taken up by the buyer, the buyer may be estopped from setting up a defect in the documents as a ground for termination even though the buyer did not know of it. The seller would need to establish that it would be unjust for the buyer to go back on the representation implied by the latter’s conduct in accepting the documents.82
[31-10] Promissory estoppel.83 Because of the traditional requirement that the representation be one of fact,84 estoppel by a representation (or promise) as to future conduct is less common. The principle of promissory estoppel is founded on words or conduct amounting to a representation, promise or assurance that the promisee will not at a future time exercise the right to terminate. If such words or conduct have been relied on by the promisor to its detriment, so that it would be inequitable for the promisee to contradict the representation, promise or assurance, the promisee will be precluded from electing to terminate.85 The words or conduct said to give rise to the estoppel must be clear and unequivocal. For example, in Legione v Hateley86 purchasers of land breached an essential time stipulation and the vendors, in accordance with the contract, served a notice requiring completion within 15 days and advising that the contract would be ‘rescinded’ on a failure to comply with the notice. Prior to the expiry of the notice the purchasers asked whether a further seven days would be allowed for completion. The vendors’ solicitors replied that this would be ‘all right’, but that they would ‘have to get [page 736] instructions’. There was no further communication, and on the expiry of the notice the vendors advised that the contract was rescinded pursuant to the contract. The High Court, by majority, held that there was no estoppel because there was only an equivocal reply to the purchasers’ inquiry. The element of inequity is also essential, and in the present context requires proof of unconscionable conduct by the party who would otherwise be entitled to terminate. For example, if a seller tenders documents under a sale of goods contract and the buyer takes these up notwithstanding the presence in the documents of a clear indication that the goods were shipped late, the buyer may be treated as having impliedly represented (by conduct) that the goods will not be rejected when they arrive. If it would be unconscionable to allow contradiction of the (earlier) representation, for example, because the seller has tendered the goods in reliance,87 the buyer will be precluded from terminating the contract on the ground of late shipment.88 Any termination based on that ground will therefore be ineffective.
Exclusion Clauses and Breach by Terminating Party [31-11] Exclusion clauses. As has been explained,89 the application of an exclusion clause depends on the construction of the contract unless a statutory provision renders the clause void or inoperative. Although the seriousness of the promisor’s breach is relevant to the construction of exclusion clauses,90 the mere fact that a breach would, but for the clause, give rise to a right to terminate does not mean that the clause does not apply. However, where a breach is serious an exclusion may be construed as inapplicable. For example, in Robert A Munro & Co Ltd v Meyer,91 an exclusion clause in a sale of goods contract provided: ‘The goods to be taken with all faults and defects; damaged or inferior, if any, at valuation to be arranged mutually or by arbitration.’ Wright J held that this no-rejection clause did not preclude termination where the sellers were in breach by tendering goods which did not match the description required by the contract. He reasoned that a breach in relation to the description of the goods was too severe to be covered by the clause, and effectively restricted it to defects in the quality or condition of the goods. Because the right to terminate is distinct from the right to damages, the fact that a clause excludes the right to damages does not of itself imply that the right to terminate is also excluded.92 [31-12] Breach by terminating party. The general rule, it seems, is that a breach by the terminating party is not a restriction on termination unless [page 737] it was so serious as to give the other party the right to terminate the performance of the contract.93 For example, in Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd,94 the shipowners’ breach of the seaworthiness clause did not preclude their termination of the performance of the contract on the ground of the charterers’ repudiation by wrongful termination. Similarly, where, at the time of termination, the promisee is not ready and willing to perform, the absence of readiness or willingness does not restrict termination in respect of a breach or
repudiation by the promisor, unless the promisor was entitled to terminate the performance of the contract.95 Where both parties are in breach, complicated fact situations frequently arise, and it may be impossible to apportion blame with any degree of certainty. For example, where a contract creates concurrent obligations, and both parties are guilty of delay, it may be that neither party is in a position to terminate performance, because both have contributed to the delay. In theory, they remain bound by their contractual obligations. The English courts have held this to be the position where parties to a submission to arbitration are both guilty of delay.96 Some dissatisfaction with the result in that context has been registered,97 because it is unrealistic to expect a respondent to arbitration proceedings to wake up a sleeping arbitration. In Australia a different result is possible in this context due to a power to approach the court.98 However, the general principle remains valid that delay in performance may prevent a party successfully terminating the contract. And breach by both parties may signify that the contract has been abandoned.99
Relief Against Forfeiture100 [31-13] Inherent jurisdiction. Termination of the performance of a contract will deprive the promisor of the benefits which were expected from future performance by the promisee. It may also enable the promisee to [page 738] retain money paid under the contract, since the contract may provide that the money is to be forfeited if the contract is discharged. Alternatively, termination may lead to a forfeiture of the promisor’s proprietary interest in land or goods. Although it is clear that the courts do not have a general jurisdiction to relieve against the loss of the benefit of the contract, there is undoubtedly an inherent jurisdiction to grant relief against the forfeiture of money or property. Whether under the ‘special heads’ of fraud, accident, surprise or mistake, or otherwise, a court exercising equitable jurisdiction may grant relief to the promisor against the forfeiture in ‘appropriate and limited cases’.101 The relief granted may take various forms, but the main examples are:
an order for the repayment of money; an injunction preventing the promisee from terminating the performance of the contract; an order allowing the promisor further time to pay; or an order for specific performance of the contract. This inherent jurisdiction is relevant to an election by the promisee to terminate the performance of the contract in three situations.102 First, there is the situation explained by Lord Wilberforce in Shiloh Spinners Ltd v Harding.103 Where the ‘primary object’ of the contract is to secure a stated result, and an express provision for forfeiture of an interest in property was inserted in the contract ‘by way of security for the production’ of the result, the promisor may be entitled to relief against forfeiture if, notwithstanding the promisor’s breach, the result can ‘effectively be attained’, when the case comes before the court. For example, the object of the clause might be to secure payment of a debt due under the contract. But the provision must effect the forfeiture of an interest in property, and relief must be ‘appropriate’ in the circumstances. In Scandinavian Trading Tanker Co AB v Flota Petrolera Ecuatoriana,104 a time charterparty provided for termination in the event of default by the charterers in their obligation punctually to pay hire under the contract. Following termination for default, the charterers sought relief against forfeiture. The House of Lords held that even if the termination provision was intended to secure the production of a stated result, namely, punctual payment of hire, there was no case for relief. The charterers had no property interest in the vessel: the contract being one for the provision of services, their interest was purely contractual. The court was also influenced by: [page 739] (1) the uncertainty which would be created by the granting of relief in a commercial contract;105 (2) the fact that the contract had been freely entered into by parties with equal bargaining power; (3) the absence of unconscionable conduct; and (4) the fact that relief by way of injunction against the shipowners would
have been tantamount to specific performance of a contract for the provision of services.106 The case does not, however, stand for the proposition that relief will never be granted in the context of a commercial contract. For example, in BICC Plc v Burndy Corp107 the English Court of Appeal said that relief may be granted against the forfeiture of an interest in a patent, by allowing further time for performance. And, in On Demand Information Plc v Michael Gerson Finance Plc,108 the same court acknowledged that in an appropriate case relief may be granted against forfeiture of a lessee’s possessory interest under a commercial chattel lease which has been terminated for non-payment of hire. Second, under Australian law, relief may be granted where a sale of land contract is terminated, in order to prevent the forfeiture of the purchaser’s equitable interest in the land.109 In these cases forfeiture is a consequence of termination rather than the effect of an express provision designed to secure a stated result. Although it may be relevant to consider whether the forfeiture operates as a penalty for non-observance of the contract,110 this is not an essential requirement. In Legione v Hateley111 a majority of the High Court held that in extreme cases it may be appropriate for the court to give relief by decreeing specific performance of the contract. In that case termination would have been particularly hard on the purchasers as they had been let into possession and effected a substantial improvement to the land by erecting a dwelling. Since there was nothing in the contract to entitle them to compensation in respect of this improvement, the vendors would have received what Gibbs CJ and Murphy J described112 as ‘an ill-merited windfall’. Mason and Deane JJ said113 that it was relevant to consider factors such as the following: [page 740] (1) Did the conduct of the vendor contribute to the purchaser’s breach? (2) Was the purchaser’s breach (a) trivial or slight, and (b) inadvertent and not wilful? (3) What damage or other adverse consequences did the vendor suffer by reason of the purchaser’s breach? (4) What is the magnitude of the purchaser’s loss and the vendor’s gain if the forfeiture is to stand? (5) Is specific performance with or without compensation an adequate safeguard for the vendor?
The court may intervene even though the right to terminate has been exercised.114 For example, in Stern v McArthur115 a contract for the sale of land provided for the payment of the price by instalments over a number of years, and the High Court (by majority) held that the purchaser was entitled to relief against
the forfeiture of the interest which arose on entry into the contract when the vendor acted unconscionably in exercising an express right of termination for non-payment of instalments of the price. Nevertheless, relief is rarely granted on this basis, and will be refused if there is no evidence of unconscionable conduct by the vendor. Thus, in Ciavarella v Balmer,116 the High Court refused to entertain a claim for relief against forfeiture as there was no evidence of unconscionability. Third, the decision in Tanwar Enterprises Pty Ltd v Cauchi117 is a reminder that the ‘special heads’ of fraud, accident, surprise or mistake are still relevant. On 25 June 2001, the date agreed for settlement of a contract for the sale of land, the purchaser advised that he was unable to proceed on account of delay in obtaining foreign-sourced funding. The money was expected to be received (as the vendors were told) and was in fact received, on the following day. The purchaser requested settlement. However, the vendors advised that they had already instructed their solicitors to terminate the contracts. Since time was of the essence, the vendors were entitled to terminate. In relation to relief against forfeiture, Gleeson CJ, McHugh, Gummow, Hayne and Heydon JJ said:118 at least where accident and mistake are not involved, it will be necessary to point to the conduct of the vendor as having in some significant respect caused or contributed to the breach of the essential time stipulation.
Relief against forfeiture was not available because the conduct of the vendor had not contributed to the breach. Specific performance was therefore refused. Relief against forfeiture is not relevant to cases where the forfeiture results from the failure of a contingency which is not the subject of an express (or implied) obligation on the promisor.119 For example, where A grants an option to B, B’s failure to exercise it in time is not a breach of [page 741] contract and, although the effect of the failure is a forfeiture of an interest in the land, the court’s inherent jurisdiction to grant relief against forfeiture does not become relevant. [31-14] Statutory jurisdiction. Some statutes confer a jurisdiction to grant relief against forfeiture. Two examples may be given in order to indicate the main contexts of relief. First, where a lessor is proceeding, by action or otherwise, to enforce a right of re-entry or forfeiture under any ‘proviso or
stipulation’ in a lease for a breach of any ‘covenant or condition’ (not involving the payment of rent) the lessee may apply to the court which may, having regard to the proceedings and conduct of the parties, and to such other circumstances as it thinks fit, grant relief, on such terms (if any) as are appropriate.120 Second, in some jurisdictions there is a power to grant relief against the forfeiture of an option to purchase contained in a lease.121
Other Possible Restrictions122 [31-15] Statute. Although there is no example in Australia of a general statutory provision applying in all cases of termination, there are instances of restrictions operating in specific contexts and for specific purposes. For example, in the context of commercial leases123 statutory restrictions on termination are present for the purpose of allowing the court to grant relief against forfeiture. Under the National Credit Code (Sch 1 to National Consumer Credit Protection Act 2009 (Cth)) detailed provisions can be found regulating the exercise by a credit provider of rights under contracts regulated by the Acts. More generally, under the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW),124 the court may grant relief in respect of ‘unjust’ contracts or provisions. Two provisions in the sale of goods legislation restrict termination.125 [page 742] First, under the legislation of all Australian jurisdictions, ‘acceptance’ of goods (or part thereof) by the buyer prevents rejection of the goods and termination of the performance of the contract.126 This restriction does not apply where the buyer has accepted part of the goods and the contract is ‘severable’.127 The legislation deems acceptance to have occurred in three situations:128 (1) where the buyer intimates acceptance to the seller; (2) where the buyer does an act in relation to the goods which is inconsistent with the ownership of the seller; and (3) where the buyer does not reject the goods within a reasonable period of time. In the Australian Capital Territory129 each of the three cases of acceptance is
subject to the buyer’s right to a reasonable opportunity of examining the goods. In some jurisdictions130 the description of acceptance by an act in relation to the goods which is inconsistent with the ownership of the seller is subject to the buyer’s right to a reasonable opportunity of examining the goods. In the other jurisdictions the relation between acceptance and the right to examine is governed by the general law and is unclear.131 The second restriction is that the passing of property in specific goods bars rejection — and therefore prevents termination — unless there is a term in the contract providing for a contrary result.132 This unfair restriction of the buyer’s right of rejection, which confuses termination with rescission ab initio,133 does not apply in the Australian Capital Territory, New South Wales or South Australia.134 It is irrelevant to a consumer’s right to reject goods under the Australian Consumer Law.135 [31-16] Impossibility of restitutio in integrum. Where a contract is rescinded ab initio, for example, for misrepresentation, the parties must be [page 743] restored, substantially at least, to the positions which they occupied prior to entry into the contract.136 Since termination for breach or repudiation merely operates in futuro, this requirement of restitutio does not apply as a general restriction on an election to terminate.137 That restitutio may be required by the particular facts of a case is illustrated by Rawson v Hobbs.138 Title to the sheep and cattle on the grazing property had passed to the purchasers who had, for a period of time, occupied the land. Dixon CJ said that on the facts the purchasers’ termination could not ‘amount to a rescission ab initio with complete restitutio in integrum’. However, in order for termination by the purchasers to be effective, restitution in respect of the benefits received was required. The court therefore declared that the purchasers were discharged from the contract of sale but entitled to a refund of the money which they had paid, subject to a deduction to take account of the benefits which they had obtained under the contract. [31-17] Unconscionability, good faith and reasonableness. On one view, statute, as well as concepts such as election and estoppel, provide sufficient protection against the unfair or unjust exercise of termination rights. However, from time to time suggestions are made that additional restrictions operate, either generally or in specific contexts. For example, in Panchaud Frères SA v
Etablissements General Grain Co,139 a buyer of goods was held not to be entitled to terminate the performance of the contract on the ground that the seller had breached a condition by late shipment. Lord Denning MR said140 they were estopped by their conduct in accepting shipping documents, a close examination of which would have disclosed the sellers’ breach. Winn LJ based his decision on a broader ‘requirement of fair conduct’.141 However, in Glencore Grain Rotterdam BV v Lebanese Organisation for International Commerce142 the English Court of Appeal has explained the case, on narrow grounds, and rejected the idea that the Panchaud Frères decision stands for any principle of ‘fair conduct’ independent of waiver and estoppel. Although it is therefore clear that there is no general requirement that contractual rights, particularly those conferred by the common law, must be exercised reasonably,143 in particular contexts requirements of reasonableness and good faith have been applied. Thus, in the context of express termination rights in building contracts a requirement of reasonableness has been implied.144 In some contracts it may be implied [page 744] that rights are to be exercised in good faith or reasonably.145 It is also arguable that cases such as Legione v Hateley146 have a more general basis, namely, that the court may grant relief against the termination of any contract where the promisee is guilty of unconscionable conduct.147 [31-18] Delay. Generally, an election to terminate the performance of a contract must be made within a reasonable time.148 The basis for this restriction on the right to terminate can be seen as an implied term of the contract149 or (preferably) a requirement of election itself.150 In some cases a failure to elect within a reasonable time will give rise to estoppel,151 and there are statutes which fix a reasonable time for election.152 What constitutes a reasonable time is an issue of fact depending on the circumstances of the case at the time when the period is alleged to have expired.153 The mere fact that there has been some delay does not mean that it is unreasonable since there is no requirement that the promisee elect immediately.154 Moreover, delay is not unreasonable merely because the promisor has had sufficient time to tender performance to the promisee.155
It is open to the parties to fix a maximum period for termination, for example, by requiring rejection of goods under a sale of goods contract within a specified period of time. And in some cases the maximum period of time allowed to the promisee is the subject of statutory determination.156 1.
See, eg Chanter v Leese (1838) 4 M & W 295 at 311; 150 ER 1440 at 1447 (affirmed (1839) 5 M & W 698; 151 ER 296). Contrast Behn v Burness (1863) 3 B & S 751 at 754, 759; 122 ER 281 at 283, 284.
2.
Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827. The House of Lords overruled Harbutt’s ‘Plasticine’ Ltd v Wayne Tank and Pump Co Ltd [1970] 1 QB 447 on this basis (see [3209]).
3.
See [31-02].
4.
Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v Watson (1946) 72 CLR 435; Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 427–8; 131 ALR 422; Visscher v Giudice (2009) 239 CLR 361 at 379–80; 258 ALR 651; [2009] HCA 34 at [53].
5.
See, eg Marriott v Oxford and District Co-operative Society Ltd (No 2) [1970] 1 QB 186. Cf Vine v National Dock Labour Board [1957] AC 488 at 500.
6.
[1981] Ch 448. See also Decro-Wall International SA v Practitioners in Marketing Ltd [1971] 1 WLR 361 (agency).
7.
[1981] Ch 448 at 460.
8.
Southern Foundries (1926) Ltd v Shirlaw [1940] AC 701 at 722.
9.
See [39-03] and [37-21].
10.
Decro-Wall International SA v Practitioners in Marketing Ltd [1971] 1 WLR 361 at 376. But there may be express agreement to the contrary, or statute may provide for automatic termination. See K D Ewing, ‘Remedies for Breach of the Contract of Employment’ [1993] CLJ 405 at 409–15.
11.
See New Zealand Shipping Co Ltd v Société des Ateliers et Chantiers de France [1919] AC 1; Newbon v City Mutual Life Assurance Society Ltd (1935) 52 CLR 723 at 732–3.
12.
Suttor v Gundowda Pty Ltd (1950) 81 CLR 418 at 441–2; Meehan v Jones (1982) 149 CLR 571 at 591–2; 42 ALR 463. But see Rudi’s Enterprises Pty Ltd v Jay (1987) 10 NSWLR 568.
13.
Thompson v ASDA-MFI Group Plc [1988] Ch 241.
14.
Cheall v APEX [1983] 2 AC 180; Alghussein Establishment v Eton College [1988] 1 WLR 587 at 593–4. Cf Westralian Farmers Ltd v Commonwealth Agricultural Service Engineers Ltd (1936) 54 CLR 361 (see [37-26]).
15.
See Cheall v APEX [1983] 2 AC 180 at 188–9.
16.
See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, ch 10.
17.
Heyman v Darwins Ltd [1942] AC 356; Holland v Wiltshire (1954) 90 CLR 409.
18.
R v Paulson [1921] 1 AC 271 at 277; Dyke v McLeish Estates Ltd (1927) 27 SR (NSW) 74 at 76; White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor [1962] AC 413.
19.
Loughridge v Lavery [1969] VR 912 at 922; Bunge Corp New York v Tradax Export SA Panama [1981] 1 WLR 711 at 725.
20.
See J W Carter and Yihan Goh, ‘Concurrent and Independent Rights to Terminate for Breach of Contract’ (2010) 26 JCL 103.
21.
Shepherd v Felt and Textiles of Australia Ltd (1931) 45 CLR 359; Sunbird Plaza Pty Ltd v Maloney (1988) 166 CLR 245; Concut Pty Ltd v Worrell (2000) 176 ALR 693.
22.
(1961) 107 CLR 466.
23.
[1971] 1 QB 164 (see [30-14]).
24.
Compare and contrast W Devis & Sons Ltd v Atkins [1977] AC 931 and West Midlands Co-operative Society Ltd v Tipton [1986] AC 536 (see Simon Deakin [1986] CLJ 214).
25.
See [31-04].
26.
See Heisler v Anglo-Dal Ltd [1954] 1 WLR 1273.
27.
See generally [31-08]–[31-10].
28.
Estoppel is the proper rationalisation for Panchaud Frères SA v Etablissements General Grain Co [1970] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 53 (see [31-17]). See also Bowes v Chaleyer (1923) 32 CLR 159 at 184, 191, 197 (‘waiver’ of the right to terminate on any other ground).
29.
Hoad v Swan (1920) 28 CLR 258, unless the evidence of election is documentary in character: Larratt v Bankers and Traders Insurance Co Ltd (1941) 41 SR (NSW) 215 at 225.
30.
Car and Universal Finance Co Ltd v Caldwell [1965] 1 QB 525 at 550; Lakshmijit v Sherani [1974] AC 605 at 616. But see Poort v Development Underwriting (Victoria) Pty Ltd (No 2) [1977] VR 454 at 459 and cf Zucker v Straightlace Pty Ltd (1986) 11 NSWLR 87 at 95.
31.
Heyman v Darwins Ltd [1942] AC 356 at 362; International Leasing Corp (Vic) Ltd v Aiken [1967] 2 NSWR 427. Query the position where the writ is not served; see Garnac Grain Co Inc v HMF Faure & Fairclough Ltd [1968] AC 1130n at 1140.
32.
Wood Factory Pty Ltd v Kiritos Pty Ltd (1985) 2 NSWLR 105 at 146; Vitol SA v Norelf Ltd (The Santa Clara) [1996] AC 800 at 810–11.
33.
Holland v Wiltshire (1954) 90 CLR 409. See also Vitol SA v Norelf Ltd [1996] AC 800 (see J W Carter (1997) 11 JCL 255).
34.
Ogle v Comboyuro Investments Pty Ltd (1976) 136 CLR 444 at 452, 460–1. See further [31-06].
35.
See, eg Sullivan v Glennon (1986) 68 ALR 399; 61 ALJR 63.
36.
[1997] AC 749 (see P V Baker (1998) 114 LQR 55).
37.
See [1997] AC 749 at 768, 780, 782.
38.
[1997] AC 749 at 768.
39.
See, eg L Schuler AG v Wickman Machine Tool Sales Ltd [1974] AC 235.
40.
Eriksson v Whalley [1971] 1 NSWLR 397.
41.
See, eg Amann Aviation Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth (1990) 92 ALR 601 (affirmed without reference to the point sub nom Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64). Although the clause may itself introduce requirements analogous to public law notions of natural justice, this is not a necessary consequence of a notice procedure: Hounslow London BC v Twickenham Garden Developments Ltd [1971] 1 Ch 233.
42.
See [30-36].
43.
See ACT: Civil Law (Property) Act 2006, s 426(1); NSW: Conveyancing Act 1919, s 129(1); NT: Law of Property Act 2000, ss 137, 138; Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 124(1); SA: Landlord and Tenant Act 1936, s 10; Tas: Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1884, s 15(1); Vic: Property Law Act 1958, s 146(1); WA: Property Law Act 1969, s 81(1).
44.
See also Property Law Act 1974 (Qld), s 72 (instalment contract for sale of land).
45.
(1985) 156 CLR 342; 58 ALR 269. See also O’Reilly v Mackman [1983] 2 AC 237; Macksville & District Hospital v Mayze (1987) 10 NSWLR 708. Compare and contrast Sibbles v Highfern Pty Ltd (1987) 164 CLR 214; Braidotti v Queensland City Properties Ltd (1991) 172 CLR 293; 100 ALR 1 (impact of Property Law Act 1974 (Qld), s 72).
46.
Immer (No 145) Pty Ltd v Uniting Church in Australia Property Trust (NSW) (1993) 182 CLR 26; 112 ALR 609 (see Diane Skapinker (1994) 7 JCL 86).
47.
[1941] AC 1 at 30. See also Wendt v Bruce (1931) 45 CLR 245 at 257.
48.
Fuller’s Theatre and Vaudeville Co Ltd v Rofe [1923] AC 435; Elder’s Trustee and Executor Co Ltd v Commonwealth Homes and Investment Co Ltd (1941) 65 CLR 603 at 617–18; Wallace v Hermans (1974) 131 CLR 672; 4 ALR 285.
49.
See, eg Owendale Pty Ltd v Anthony (1967) 117 CLR 539 at 556, 601.
50.
[1965] VR 433 (see [18-48]).
51.
(1974) 131 CLR 634; 4 ALR 257.
52.
(1984) 165 CLR 622 at 633–4; 54 ALR 639. See also Zucker v Straightlace Pty Ltd (1986) 11 NSWLR 87 at 93; Motor Oil Hellas (Corinth) Refineries SA v Shipping Corp of India (The Kanchenjunga) [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 391 at 398–9.
53.
See, eg Peyman v Lanjani [1985] Ch 457. See K R Handley, ‘Exploring Election’ (2006) 122 LQR 82.
54.
Larratt v Bankers and Traders Insurance Co Ltd (1941) 41 SR (NSW) 215 at 227.
55.
Davenport v R (1877) 3 App Cas 115; Wendt v Bruce (1931) 45 CLR 245. Contrast International Leasing Corp (Vic) Ltd v Aiken [1967] 2 NSWR 427.
56.
Barclay v Messenger (1874) 30 LT 351; Tropical Traders Ltd v Goonan (1964) 111 CLR 41; AquaMax Pty Ltd v MT Associates Pty Ltd (2001) 3 VR 473.
57.
Ogle v Comboyuro Investments Pty Ltd (1976) 136 CLR 444 at 451; Meng Leong Development Pte Ltd v Jip Hong Trading Co Pte Ltd [1985] AC 511.
58.
Central Estates (Belgravia) Ltd v Woolgar (No 2) [1972] 1 WLR 1048 at 1054; Sargent v ASL Developments Ltd (1974) 131 CLR 634 at 655–6.
59.
Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd v Luna Park (NSW) Ltd (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 632 at 645 (reversed on other grounds sub nom Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd (1938) 61 CLR 286).
60.
Larking v Great Western (Nepean) Gravel Ltd (1940) 64 CLR 221.
61.
Ogle v Comboyuro Investments Pty Ltd (1976) 136 CLR 444.
62.
See, eg Matthews v Smallwood [1910] 1 Ch 777 at 786; Craine v Colonial Mutual Fire Insurance Co Ltd (1920) 28 CLR 305 at 326 (affirmed sub nom Yorkshire Insurance Co Ltd v Craine [1922] 2 AC 541).
63.
See, eg Larratt v Barkers and Traders Insurance Co Ltd (1941) 41 SR (NSW) 215 at 227; Kammins Ballrooms Co Ltd v Zenith Investments (Torquay) Ltd [1971] AC 850. See also [7-26]–[7-29].
64.
See Mulcahy v Hoyne (1925) 36 CLR 41 at 55, 56; Kwei Tek Chao v British Traders and Shippers Ltd [1954] 2 QB 459 at 477. And see [7-29].
65.
Hain SS Co Ltd v Tate and Lyle Ltd (1936) 41 Com Cas 350; [1936] 2 All ER 597 at 608. But see Banning v Wright [1972] 1 WLR 972 at 990–1.
66.
For criticism see Marion Hetherington, ‘He Who Comes to Common Law Must Come with Clean Hands’ (1980) 9 Syd LR 71; Marion Hetherington, ‘Keeping the Plaintiff Out of His Contractual Remedies: the Heresies that Survive Johnson v Agnew’ (1980) 96 LQR 403; but cf Dirik Jackson
(1981) 97 LQR 26. 67.
[1941] AC 1 at 30. See also Ciavarella v Balmer (1983) 153 CLR 438 at 449.
68.
Facey v Rawsthorne (1925) 35 CLR 566; Johnson v Agnew [1980] AC 367 (see [36- 29]); Sunbird Plaza Pty Ltd v Maloney (1988) 166 CLR 245 (see W D Duncan (1988) 62 ALJ 804).
69.
See generally on the forms of estoppel [7-02].
70.
(1933) 49 CLR 507 at 547.
71.
Maclaine v Gatty [1921] 1 AC 376 at 386; Western Australian Insurance Co Ltd v Dayton (1924) 35 CLR 355 at 374. Although silence on the part of the promisee will not usually amount to an implied representation (see Aubergine Enterprises Ltd v Lakewood International Ltd [2002] 1 WLR 2149 at 2175 (see also [7-15])), unreasonable delay in the exercise of a right to terminate may sometimes create an estoppel. See [31-18].
72.
But see Charles Rickards Ltd v Oppenhaim [1950] 1 KB 616 at 623.
73.
See Hughes v Metropolitan Railway Co (1877) 2 App Cas 439.
74.
Sargent v ASL Developments Ltd (1974) 131 CLR 634 at 642.
75.
Turner v Labafox International Pty Ltd (1974) 131 CLR 660; 4 ALR 277. But cf C J Rossiter, ‘The Doctrine of Election and Contracts for the Sale of Land’ (1986) 60 ALJ 563 at 571.
76.
See, eg Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH v Vanden Avenne-Izegem PVBA [1978] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 109 at 127; Société Italo-Belge pour le Commerce et l’Industrie v Palm and Vegetable Oils (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd (The Post Chaser) [1981] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 695 at 700. See also [7-26]–[7-29].
77.
See, eg Freshmark Ltd v Mercantile Mutual Insurance (Australia) Ltd [1994] 2 Qd R 390 at 404.
78.
See [7-18].
79.
Newbon v City Mutual Life Assurance Society Ltd (1935) 52 CLR 723 at 738; Evans v Bartlam [1937] AC 473 at 483.
80.
Maclaine v Gatty [1921] 1 AC 376 at 386; Grundt v Great Boulder Pty Gold Mines Ltd (1937) 59 CLR 641 at 674–5.
81.
[1893] 2 QB 274.
82.
The inability to reject the documents in Panchaud Frères SA v Etablissements General Grain Co [1970] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 53 (see [31-17]) can be supported on this basis.
83.
See K E Lindgren and K G Nicholson, ‘Promissory Estoppel in Australia’ (1984) 58 ALJ 249 and [701]–[7-23].
84.
See Yorkshire Insurance Co Ltd v Craine [1922] 2 AC 541 at 553.
85.
In W J Alan & Co Ltd v El Nasr Export and Import Co [1972] 2 QB 189 at 213 Lord Denning MR suggested that detriment is not required. The House of Lords left the matter open for future consideration in Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH v Vanden Avenne-Izegem PVBA [1978] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 109 at 127. See also Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385 at 413 and [7-16].
86.
(1983) 152 CLR 406; 46 ALR 1 (see also [7-09]). Contrast Strada Estates Pty Ltd v Harcla Hotels Pty Ltd (1980) 25 SASR 284.
87.
Contrast Société Italo-Belge pour le Commerce et l’Industrie v Palm and Vegetable Oils (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd (The Post Chaser) [1981] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 695, where after breach by the sellers the buyers called for the documents but rejected them. It was not inequitable for the buyers to rely on the sellers’ breach.
88.
See Kwei Tek Chao v British Traders and Shippers Ltd [1954] 2 QB 459 at 481.
89.
See [14-03].
90.
See [14-06] et seq.
91.
[1930] 2 KB 312.
92.
Even if there is no breach: Jackson v Union Marine Insurance Co Ltd (1874) LR 10 CP 125 (see [3342]); see Brian Coote, ‘Discharge for Breach and Exception Clauses Since Harbutt’s “Plasticine”’ (1977) 40 MLR 31 at 35–6. See also Ernest Beck & Co v K Szymanowski & Co [1924] AC 43 at 52 (exclusion of the right to terminate need not prevent a claim for damages being made).
93.
See Roadshow Entertainment Pty Ltd v ACN 053 006 269 Pty Ltd Receiver & Manager Appointed (formerly CEL Home Video Pty Ltd) (1997) 42 NSWLR 462 at 479–80.
94.
[1962] 2 QB 26 (see [30-58]). See also Murphy v Zamonex Pty Ltd (1993) 31 NSWLR 439 at 454.
95.
See Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385. Cf Morris v Baron & Co [1918] AC 1 at 9.
96.
Bremer Vulkan Schiffbau und Maschinenfabrik v South India Shipping Corp Ltd [1981] AC 909.
97.
See Allied Marine Transport Ltd v Vale do Rio Doce Navegacao SA (The Leonides D) [1985] 1 WLR 925 at 928; Food Corp of India v Antclizo Shipping Corp [1988] 1 WLR 603 at 605–6.
98.
See ACT: Commercial Arbitration Act 1986, s 46; NSW: Commercial Arbitration Act 2010, s 25; Qld: Commercial Arbitration Act 1990, s 46; NT: Commercial Arbitration (National Uniform Legislation) Act 2011, s 25; SA: Commercial Arbitration Act 2011, s 25; Tas: Commercial Arbitration Act 1986, s 46; Vic: Commercial Arbitration Act 2011, s 25; WA: Commercial Arbitration Act 1985, s 46.
99.
See, eg DTR Nominees Pty Ltd v Mona Homes Pty Ltd (1978) 138 CLR 423.
100. See K G Nicholson, ‘Breach of an Essential Time Stipulation and Relief Against Forfeiture’ (1983) 57 ALJ 632; W M C Gummow, ‘Forfeiture and Certainty: The High Court and the House of Lords’ in Finn, ed, Essays in Equity, 1985, p 30; Rossiter, Penalties and Forfeiture, 1992; J W Carter, ‘Problems in Enforcement — Part II’ (1993) 6 JCL 1; Lionel Smith, ‘Relief Against Forfeiture: A Restatement’ [2001] CLJ 178. 101. Shiloh Spinners Ltd v Harding [1973] AC 691 at 723. See also Legione v Hateley (1983) 152 CLR 406 at 424. 102. For relief against the forfeiture money see [37-39]–[37-40], [38-31]–[38-34]. 103. [1973] AC 691 at 723. See also Legione v Hateley (1983) 152 CLR 406 at 424; Minister for Lands and Forests v McPherson (1991) 22 NSWLR 687. 104. [1983] 2 AC 694. 105. See also Sport Internationaal Bussum BV v Inter-Footwear Ltd [1984] 1 WLR 776 at 788–9, 794 (see Charles Harpum [1984] CLJ 369). 106. Such orders are rarely made in that context. See further [39-03]. 107. [1985] Ch 232 (see Charles Harpum [1985] CLJ 204). 108. [2001] 1 WLR 155. Although the decision was reversed on appeal (see [2003] 1 AC 368), the House of Lords acknowledged that a lessee’s right to possession may be protected by relief against forfeiture. 109. Contrast Union Eagle Ltd v Golden Achievement Ltd [1997] AC 514 (see Peter Butt (1997) 71 ALJ 410; J D Heydon (1997) 113 LQR 385); Hossein Abedian and M P Furmston, ‘Relief Against Forfeiture After Breach of Essential Time Stipulation in the Light of Union Eagle Ltd v Golden Achievement Ltd’ (1998) 12 JCL 189. 110. On relief against penalties see [37-07]–[37-17], [38-32]–[38-33].
111. (1983) 152 CLR 406. 112. (1983) 152 CLR 406 at 429. 113. (1983) 152 CLR 406 at 449. The case was remitted to the Supreme Court of Victoria to decide whether it was appropriate to grant relief, and the terms on which relief — in the form of specific performance — might be granted. 114. Provided that there will be no prejudice to a third party who acted bona fide and without notice. 115. (1988) 165 CLR 489; 81 ALR 463 (see Kevin Nicholson (1989) 2 JCL 148 and (1990) 106 LQR 39). 116. (1983) 153 CLR 438. See also Sunbird Plaza Pty Ltd v Maloney (1988) 166 CLR 245 at 263 per Mason CJ (‘exceptional circumstances’); P C Developments Pty Ltd v Revell (1991) 22 NSWLR 615 (unconscionable conduct essential). Whether the vendor may invoke the principle was raised but not decided in Dainford Ltd v Yulora Pty Ltd [1984] 1 NSWLR 546. 117. (2003) 217 CLR 315; 201 ALR 359 (see G J Tolhurst and J W Carter (2004) 20 JCL 74). 118. (2003) 217 CLR 315 at 335. 119. See United Scientific Holdings Ltd v Burnley BC [1978] AC 904 at 929, 951. See also [28-37], [2913]. 120. ACT: Civil Law (Property) Act 2006, s 426(4); NSW: Conveyancing Act 1919, s 129(2); NT: Law of Property Act 2000, s 137; Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 124(2); SA: Landlord and Tenant Act 1936, s 11; Tas: Conveyancing and Law of Property Act 1884, s 15(2); Vic: Property Law Act 1958, s 146(2); WA: Property Law Act 1969, s 81(2). See also Supreme Court Act 1986 (Vic), s 85 (nonpayment of rent). 121. See [28-37]. 122. See J W Carter, ‘Problems in Enforcement — Part I’ (1992) 5 JCL 199. 123. See [31-14]. 124. See generally [24-21]–[24-27]. See also [24-28]–[24-31] (unfair contract terms legislation). 125. See also ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 16(1); NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 16(1); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 16(1); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 14(1); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 11(1); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 16(1); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 16(1); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 11(1) which preserve ‘waiver’ of condition and ‘election’ by the seller to treat a breach of condition as a breach of warranty as restrictions on the right to terminate. ‘Waiver’ must here mean something more than an election against termination. For waiver and election see [31-06], [31-08]. 126. ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 16(4); NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 16(3); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 16(4); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 14(3); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 11(3); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 16(3); Vic: Goods Act 1958, ss 16(3); 99(1); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 11(3). 127. See, eg Rosenthal & Sons Ltd v Esmail [1965] 1 WLR 1117. 128. ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 39; NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 38; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 38; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 37; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 35; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 40; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 42; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 35. 129. Sale of Goods Act 1954 (ACT), s 39. 130. NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 38; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 35; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 42. See Peter Kincaid, ‘Acceptance and Examination under the Amended Sale of Goods Acts’ (1994) 68 ALJ 515. 131. See J S Robertson (Aust) Pty Ltd v Martin (1956) 94 CLR 30 at 44, 51–2, 59–60.
NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 16(4); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 14(3); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 132. 1896, s 16(3); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 16(3); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 11(3). 133. The restriction is derived from Street v Blay (1831) 2 B & Ad 456; 109 ER 1212, where restitutio in integrum was stated to be a requirement of termination. For the present position see [31-16], [38-06], [38-36]. 134. A similar reform is recommended by the Law Reform Commission of Western Australia, Report on the Sale of Goods Act 1895, Project No 89, 1998. 135. See also Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic), ss 25, 26. 136. See [18-45], [38-36]. 137. McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 477; Johnson v Agnew [1980] AC 367. Any suggestions to the contrary in Fullers’ Theatres Ltd v Musgrove (1923) 31 CLR 524 at 539–44 must be regarded as incorrect or restricted to the particular circumstances of that case. See further [32-04]. 138. (1961) 107 CLR 466 (see [31-03]). 139. [1970] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 53. See Tony Dugdale and David Yates, ‘Variation, Waiver and Estoppel — A Re-appraisal’ (1976) 39 MLR 680. 140. [1970] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 53 at 57. 141. [1970] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 53 at 59. 142. [1997] 4 All ER 514 (see J W Carter (1999) 14 JCL 239). 143. See White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor [1962] AC 413 at 430; Vroon BV v Foster’s Brewing Group Ltd [1994] 2 VR 32 at 95–7; Clegg v Andersson T/A Nordic Marine [2003] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 32 at 48. Cf Alcatel Australia Ltd v Scarcella (1998) 44 NSWLR 349 at 369. 144. See Renard Constructions (ME) Pty Ltd v Minister for Public Works (1992) 26 NSWLR 234; Hughes Bros Pty Ltd v Trustees of the Roman Catholic Church for the Archdiocese of Sydney (1993) 31 NSWLR 91. Cf Amann Aviation Pty Ltd v The Commonwealth (1990) 92 ALR 601, and on appeal sub nom Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64 (impact of show cause procedure). 145. See, eg Imperial Group Pension Trust Ltd v Imperial Tobacco Ltd [1991] 1 WLR 589 at 597; Central Exchange Ltd v Anaconda Nickel Ltd (2001) 24 WAR 382 at 393. See generally on good faith Chapter 2. 146. (1983) 152 CLR 406 (see [31-10]). 147. See CSS Investments Pty Ltd v Lopiron Pty Ltd (1987) 76 ALR 463 at 472, 482; Sunbird Plaza Pty Ltd v Maloney (1988) 166 CLR 245 at 263; Federal Airports Corp v Makucha Developments Pty Ltd (1993) 115 ALR 679. 148. Champtaloup v Thomas [1976] 2 NSWLR 264 at 273; China National Foreign Trade Transportation Corp v Evlogia Shipping Co SA of Panama (The Mihalios Xilas) [1979] 1 WLR 1018 at 1023. 149. See Antaios Compania Naviera SA v Salen Rederierna AB [1983] 1 WLR 1362 (affirmed without reference to the point [1985] AC 191); CMA CGM SA v Beteiligungs- KG MS ‘Northern Pioneer’ Schiffahrtsgesellschaft mbH [2003] 1 WLR 1015 at 1037. Contrast More OG Romsdal Fylkesbatar AS v Demise Charterers of the Ship ‘Jotunheim’ [2005] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 181 at 186. 150. See, eg Carter v Scargill (1875) LR 10 QB 564; Majik Markets Pty Ltd v S & M Motor Repairs Pty Ltd (No 1) (1987) 10 NSWLR 49 at 54. 151. See Mardorf Peach & Co Ltd v Attica Sea Carriers Corp of Liberia [1977] AC 850 at 871, 880. 152. See [31-15].
See [28-04]. The decision in Bernstein v Pamson Motors (Golders Green) Ltd [1987] 2 All ER 220, 153. interpreting the sale of goods provision (see [31-15]), seems unduly restrictive (see F M B Reynolds (1988) 104 LQR 16). 154. A contrary statement in Pennicott v Pennicott (1936) 30 Tas LR 111 at 116 is based on a misinterpretation of Halkett v Earl of Dudley [1907] 1 Ch 590 at 597 (equitable right of ‘rescission’). 155. See, eg Mardorf Peach & Co Ltd v Attica Sea Carriers Corp of Liberia [1977] AC 850. 156. See Australian Consumer Law, s 261.
[page 745]
Chapter 32
Consequences of Termination [32-01] Discharge of contractual duties.1 An election to terminate the performance of a contract, whether for breach or repudiation, discharges the parties from the obligation to perform (or to be ready and willing to perform) their respective contractual duties.2 It is sometimes said that such an election ‘rescinds’ or ‘terminates’ the contract. In some cases, termination may relate to a distinct part of the contract.3 However, it is clear that termination affects the parties’ duties rather than the contract itself. The classic statement of this fundamental point is contained in Lord Porter’s speech in Heyman v Darwins Ltd:4 To say that the contract is rescinded or has come to an end or has ceased to exist may in individual cases convey the truth with sufficient accuracy, but the fuller expression that the injured party is thereby absolved from future performance of his obligations under the contract is a more accurate description of the position. Strictly speaking to say that on acceptance of the renunciation of a contract the contract is rescinded is incorrect. In such a case the injured party may accept the renunciation as a breach going to the root of the whole consideration. By that acceptance he is discharged from further performance and may bring an action for damages, but the contract itself is not rescinded.
Although Lord Porter’s statement refers only to discharge of the promisee, in most cases both parties will be discharged by the promisee’s election to terminate.5 It is also clear that although the statement refers only to repudiation (‘renunciation’), it applies generally to all bases for termination. [page 746]
Extent of Discharge [32-02] Time and scope of discharge. Discharge of a contract, by a promisee’s election to terminate, takes effect from the time of the promisee’s election. It is not retrospective to the time of the promisor’s breach or repudiation.6
Although discharge is effective from the time of termination, most statements apply the discharging effect to all the unperformed primary obligations of the parties.7 In other words, it is not restricted to those obligations which would have fallen due for performance after termination. A narrower statement in Hyundai Heavy Industries Co Ltd v Papadopoulos,8 restricting discharge to such obligations, may be explained by the fact that an accrued right to receive performance was being considered. In the absence of an accrued right, the promisee can only enforce the promisor’s obligations by way of a claim for damages.9 The narrower statement, if generally applied, would lead to absurd results. For example, assume that a vendor of land terminated performance after the time for payment of the price had arrived. Applying the narrower statement the vendor would, prima facie, be entitled to recover the price of the land on the ground that it should have been paid prior to termination. The true position is that the purchaser is discharged from the obligation to pay the price, but liable in damages for breach.10 [32-03] Finality of discharge. Once the promisee has exercised a right to terminate and the parties have been discharged, the promisee cannot go back on the election.11 Neither party is permitted to reinstate the contractual obligations of the parties unilaterally. The parties may agree for reinstatement, but this involves the formation of a new contract.12 An exception to the general rule of finality arises if the court, in granting relief against forfeiture, orders specific performance notwithstanding the promisee’s election to terminate the performance of the contract.13 [page 747]
Accrued Rights Not Divested14 [32-04] Termination distinguished from rescission. The fact that a contract is not rescinded when it is discharged for breach or repudiation is very significant where accrued rights are in issue. In McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd15 Dixon J explained the significance in the following words:16 When a party to a simple contract, upon a breach by the other contracting party of a condition of the contract, elects to treat the contract as no longer binding upon him, the contract is not rescinded as from the beginning. Both parties are discharged from the further performance of the contract, but rights are not divested or discharged which have already been unconditionally acquired. Rights and
obligations which arise from the partial execution of the contract and causes of action which have accrued from its breach alike continue unaffected. When a contract is rescinded because of matters which affect its formation, as in the case of fraud, the parties are to be rehabilitated and restored, so far as may be, to the position they occupied before the contract was made. But when a contract, which is not void or voidable at law, or liable to be set aside in equity, is dissolved at the election of one party because the other has not observed an essential condition or has committed a breach going to its root, the contract is determined so far as it is executory only and the party in default is liable for damages for its breach.
Of course, Dixon J was using the word ‘rescinded’, in the sense of ‘terminated’.17 As already mentioned, in the context of breach, it is preferable to use the terminology of termination or discharge.18 [32-05] Types of accrued rights. There are two types of rights either (or both) of which may survive termination: (1) the right to damages; and (2) the right to receive performance of a contractual obligation. If an accrued right exists, it is not divested by termination even if it exists for the benefit of the party whose breach or repudiation led to termination.19 The assessment of damages is considered in detail later.20 At this stage it is sufficient to say that because termination discharges the unperformed obligations of a promisor, the promisor may be held liable to pay damages: in respect of the obligations which fell due for performance prior to termination; and in respect of obligations which would have fallen due for performance after termination. [page 748] When it is said that the right to receive performance of a contractual obligation may survive termination, the reference is usually to obligations to pay sums fixed by the contract. These may be enforced by way of an action in the nature of debt. Other types of obligations may be enforceable by way of injunction, but specific performance is not available. However, the fact that money should have been discharged prior to termination does not necessarily imply that an accrued right exists in respect of the obligation to pay. As Dixon J explained in McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd,21 the right must have been ‘unconditionally’ acquired by reason of the ‘partial execution’ of the contract.22
The survival of accrued rights, and the effects of termination, have sometimes been explained in terms of a distinction between primary and secondary obligations.23 Termination discharges the primary obligations of the parties, that is, those obligations expressly or impliedly created by the contract. However, it does not discharge the secondary obligations of the parties, that is, those obligations which arise by operation of law on the breach of primary contractual obligations. The chief secondary obligation is a promisor’s obligation to pay damages for breach. This is not discharged by termination even though the primary obligation breached by the promisor is discharged so that, in most cases, the secondary obligation is substitutive in character. However, some primary obligations do survive termination, because of the express or implied intention of the parties. In these cases the secondary obligation is additional to the primary obligation. It is because termination usually discharges all ‘unperformed’ primary obligations that the promisee is so frequently unable to enforce a primary obligation after termination.
Restitutionary Claims [32-06] Restitutionary claim for benefit conferred. A restitutionary claim may be enforceable after termination to recover in respect of a benefit conferred prior to termination in performing the contract. The benefit may be money paid prior to termination, or goods or services supplied. [32-07] Termination a requirement for restitution. Restitutionary claims of the type referred to in the preceding paragraph can only be pursued after the performance of the contract has been terminated.24 They are distinguishable from claims for damages, and actions to recover liquidated sums due under the contract. Restitutionary claims are based on the principle of unjust enrichment. They depend on elements of injustice and benefit rather than the presence of breach. Moreover, although termination is essential there is no requirement that the claim be pursued by the party who elected to [page 749] terminate. This means that, for example, a promisor may claim restitution of a
monetary payment on the basis of a total failure of consideration even though a breach or repudiation on the promisor’s part led to termination.25
Terms Operating After Termination [32-08] Operation of terms a question of construction. Whether or not a contractual term operates after termination is a question of construction.26 If the parties expressly provide that a particular term is (or is not) to be enforceable after termination the construction question presents no great difficulties. Usually, however, there is no express agreement on the matter and the court is left to decide what the parties must, as reasonable persons, have intended. If the court decides that a term was intended to survive termination, two further questions may arise for decision. First, if the term operates in favour of the party whose breach or repudiation led to termination, was the intention of the parties contingent on that party not being in breach of contract?27 Second, is the term unenforceable, by reason of a legal restriction based on public policy or statute?28 [32-09] Types of terms likely to survive termination. Where there is no express agreement, in order to decide whether a term was intended to survive termination regard will be had, mainly, to the nature of the term sought to be enforced. Some terms, such as exclusion clauses29 and agreed damages clauses,30 deal with the consequences of breach and must usually be intended to operate after termination. The decision in Harbutt’s ‘Plasticine’ Ltd v Wayne Tank and Pump Co Ltd,31 which suggested that termination for fundamental breach necessarily precludes the enforcement of an exclusion clause, was overruled by the House of Lords in Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd.32 In Port Jackson Stevedoring Pty Ltd v Salmond & Spraggon (Aust) Pty Ltd33 the Privy Council found no difficulty in applying Securicor, when giving its advice on an appeal from the High Court. The Privy Council said that the basis for applying the exclusion clause in question after termination was that it regulated the ‘manner in which liability’34 was to be established. A term regulating liability, such as the exclusion clause in the Port Jackson case, is quite different from a term creating a primary contractual
[page 750] obligation. Generally, a term creating a primary obligation is not enforceable after termination except by way of a claim for damages.35 However, some such terms are intended to operate after termination. For example, a term requiring an employee not to disclose confidential information, or a term restraining an employee from competing with his or her employer may be intended to operate after termination. A further distinction can be drawn between procedural and substantive contractual terms. A substantive obligation, such as one requiring the payment of interest on unpaid sums payable to the promisee, will not usually be enforceable after termination except by way of a claim for damages.36 On the other hand, a procedural term, such as an agreement to submit disputes to arbitration, is generally intended by the parties to be enforceable notwithstanding termination.37 [32-10] Enforcement by party in breach. The fact that the party seeking to enforce a term after termination breached the contract should be irrelevant to its enforcement, unless it can be implied that the right to enforce was conditional on the absence of breach. Obviously this implication will not be applicable to exclusion clauses since, by definition, they operate to protect a party in breach. However, statute or a public policy rule may apply.38 Where a term is substantive in nature it will usually be unenforceable after termination except by way of a claim for damages.39 Procedural clauses, on the other hand, are frequently intended to operate notwithstanding termination and are usually enforceable on that basis. For example, in Heyman v Darwins Ltd40 the House of Lords held that the arbitration clause was enforceable even though the party who was seeking its enforcement was alleged to be in breach of contract. Employment contracts sometimes contain restraint clauses intended to operate after termination. A restraint clause does not fit neatly into the distinction between substantive and procedural terms. A claim for damages against the employee will be available, but the employer is usually more concerned with injunctive relief, ideally before the term has been breached. Assuming that the clause does not infringe public policy41 it will be enforceable according to its terms if the employer was not in breach at the time of termination.42 In General Billposting Co Ltd v Atkinson43 the employers claimed both damages and an
injunction but were refused relief because they had wrongfully dismissed the employee. Notwithstanding that the restraint clause imposed a restriction on the employee’s right to trade [page 751] after termination, the House of Lords held that the discharge of the contract precluded enforcement. Lord Robertson said44 that the clause was ‘germane’ to the contract of service and unenforceable after the contract of service was ‘rescinded’. Lord Collins said45 that the employee was entitled to consider himself ‘absolved’ from further performance of the contract, including the restraint clause. The same approach was taken by the High Court in Kaufman v McGillicuddy.46 However, the view that a restraint clause is not enforceable following termination because it is a material term of the contract looks to contradict the general approach, outlined above, emphasising the intention of the parties. The decisions would be more compelling if they had been based on the view that the parties must have intended the restraint clause to be enforceable only if the employers were not in breach.47 [32-11] Public policy and statute. Even if the parties intended certain terms of the contract to be enforceable after termination, public policy or statute may intervene to make the terms unenforceable or void. For example, an agreed damages clause may infringe the rule against penalties,48 and a restraint clause may infringe public policy.49 Thus, an alternative (and perhaps more compelling) basis for cases such as General Billposting Co Ltd v Atkinson50 is that it is against public policy to permit an employer to enforce a restraint clause where the employer’s breach has led to termination.51 The statutory restrictions on the use of exclusion clauses were explained earlier.52 An exclusion clause caught by the restrictions will not be enforceable after termination even if the parties have indicated a contrary intention. And statute may prevent the enforcement of an ‘unfair’ or ‘unjust’ term.53 [page 752]
1.
See Carter, Carter’s Breach of Contract, 2011, ch 12; A M Shea, ‘Discharge from Performance of Contracts by Failure of Condition’ (1979) 42 MLR 623.
2.
McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 469–70, 476–7; Heyman v Darwins Ltd [1942] AC 356 at 367, 373, 379, 399; Walters v Cooper [1967] VR 583 at 587; Bank of Boston Connecticut v European Grain & Shipping Ltd [1989] AC 1056 at 1098–9.
3.
See J W Carter, ‘Partial Termination of Contracts’ (2008) 24 JCL 1.
4.
[1942] AC 356 at 399.
5.
Holland v Wiltshire (1954) 90 CLR 409 at 416; Johnson v Agnew [1980] AC 367 at 392.
6.
Boston Deep Sea Fishing and Ice Co v Ansell (1888) 39 Ch D 339 at 365; Larratt v Bankers and Traders Insurance Co Ltd (1941) 41 SR (NSW) 215 at 226. Compare the position where an insurance contract is discharged: see Bank of Nova Scotia v Hellenic Mutual War Risks Association (Bermuda) Ltd [1992] 1 AC 233 (see Malcolm Clarke [1991] LMCLQ 437; Mark Leeming (1992) 5 JCL 163).
7.
See, eg McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 469–70; Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827 at 849; Re Dingjan; Ex parte Wagner (1995) 183 CLR 323 at 341; 128 ALR 81. Cf Alfred McAlpine Plc v BAI (Run-Off) Ltd [2000] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 437.
8.
[1980] 1 WLR 1129 at 1141. See further [37-29] and generally on recovery of liquidated sums after termination [37-25]–[37-41].
9.
See [32-09].
10.
Laird v Pim (1841) 7 M & W 474; 151 ER 852.
11.
See [31-06].
12.
Newbon v City Mutual Life Assurance Society Ltd (1935) 52 CLR 723 at 733.
13.
See [31-13]–[31-14].
14.
See J W Carter and J C Phillips, ‘The Liability of Debtors and Guarantors Under Contracts Discharged for Breach’ (1992) 22 UWALR 338.
15.
(1933) 48 CLR 457.
16.
(1933) 48 CLR 457 at 476–7 (adopted Johnson v Agnew [1980] AC 367 at 396).
17.
See also Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Reliance Carpet Co Pty Ltd (2008) 236 CLR 342 at 345–6; 246 ALR 448 at 449–50; [2008] HCA 22 at [2].
18.
Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827 at 844; Mr Justice McGarvie, ‘Contractual Concepts of the Credit Bills’ (1979) 53 ALJ 687.
19.
See [36-13]; [37-25].
20.
See especially [36-13]–[36-17].
21.
(1933) 48 CLR 457 at 477 (see [32-04]).
22.
See [37-28]–[37-38].
23.
See A L Corbin, ‘Conditions in the Law of Contract’ (1919) 28 Yale LJ 739 at 745; Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827 at 848–50.
24.
McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457; Update Constructions Pty Ltd v Rozelle Child Care Centre Ltd (1990) 20 NSWLR 251. See further [38-39].
25.
See further [38-24].
26.
See Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827.
27.
See [32-10].
28.
See [32-11].
29.
See Brian Coote, ‘The Effect of Discharge by Breach on Exception Clauses’ [1970] CLJ 221.
30.
See generally [37-07]–[37-17]. For a specific statement on the effect of termination see International Leasing Corp (Vic) Ltd v Aiken [1967] 2 NSWR 427 at 440.
31.
[1970] 1 QB 447.
32.
[1980] AC 827.
33.
[1981] 1 WLR 138 (see [6-49], [16-26]).
34.
[1981] 1 WLR 138 at 145.
35.
See Moschi v Lep Air Services Ltd [1973] AC 331 at 345, 350.
36.
F J Bloemen Pty Ltd v Gold Coast City Council [1973] AC 115.
37.
See Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827 at 850 and further [32-10]. Even a Scott v Avery clause (see [25-26]) may be enforceable for this reason (see Woolf v Collis Removal Service [1948] 1 KB 11) although it is perhaps better regarded as enforceable on the basis that it regulates rights and liabilities.
38.
See [32-11].
39.
See [32-09].
40.
[1942] AC 356.
41.
See [26-01]–[26-21].
42.
See, eg Home Counties Dairies Ltd v Skilton [1970] 1 WLR 526 (see [26-16]).
43.
[1909] AC 118.
44.
[1909] AC 118 at 121.
45.
[1909] AC 118 at 122. The Earl of Halsbury agreed.
46.
(1914) 19 CLR 1.
47.
The court may, in the exercise of its discretion (see [40-04]), refuse to grant relief on the basis of the employer’s breach. See Geraghty v Minter (1979) 142 CLR 177 at 187; 26 ALR 141.
48.
See [37-07].
49.
See [26-01]–[26-21].
50.
[1909] AC 118 (see [32-10]).
51.
See Rock Refrigeration Ltd v Jones [1997] 1 All ER 1, CA (see Charles Wynn-Evans (1997) 113 LQR 377).
52.
See [14-22]–[14-25].
53.
See [24-20]–[24-31].
[page 753]
PART IX
Termination by Frustration
[page 755]
Chapter 33
Termination by Frustration [33-01] The concept. The modern concept of frustration was stated in the following terms by Lord Radcliffe in Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC:1 [F]rustration occurs whenever the law recognises that without default of either party a contractual obligation has become incapable of being performed because the circumstances in which performance is called for would render it a thing radically different from that which was undertaken by the contract. Non haec in foedera veni. It was not this that I promised to do.
The statement indicates that the concept is concerned with the position of the parties to a contract when, without default of either party, performance of the contract has been radically changed. Where the concept operates, the event which brings about the ‘radical’ change is usually referred to as a ‘frustrating’ event.2
The Doctrine of Frustration General Points [33-02] Frustrating events. Since frustration necessarily depends on the terms of the contract and the circumstances of the particular case, it is not possible to define, except in general terms, what constitutes a frustrating event. However, it is clear that the event must have severe consequences. Under Lord Radcliffe’s formulation3 the event must not merely alter the circumstances in which performance is called for. There must be a ‘radical’ change. Other formulations of the concept also emphasise the strictness of the requirement, by referring:
to an event which would make further performance ‘a thing different in substance’4 from that contracted for; [page 756] to an event which creates a ‘fundamentally’5 different situation; or to an event which deprives a party with further obligations to perform of ‘substantially the whole benefit which it was the intention of the parties as expressed in the contract that he should obtain’6 from performing those obligations. [33-03] Absolute contracts. The mere fact that an event deprives a party to a contract of benefits which were expected from its performance, or even renders performance physically impossible, does not imply that the doctrine of frustration can be used as an excuse for not performing. This is because a party may be found to have taken the risk of such an eventuality,7 or undertaken an absolute promise to perform. A distinction must therefore be drawn between absolute obligations on the one hand, and conditional (or dependent), obligations on the other. If an obligation is absolute, the promisor must perform, if that is physically possible, and if not pay damages for breach of contract.8 Whether or not a party to a contract has undertaken an absolute obligation depends on the construction of the contract.9 The question which then arises is whether an obligation, absolute in terms, must necessarily be construed as such. In the 17th century a literal approach was taken to this question of construction. Thus, in Paradine v Jane10 it was said that when ‘a party by his own contract creates a duty or charge upon himself, he is bound to make it good, if he may, notwithstanding an accident by inevitable necessity, because he might have provided against it by his contract’. There are statements in some of the modern cases which assume that this dictum is still applicable.11 However, it is generally accepted that a contract framed in absolute terms need not be construed as absolute in effect.12 For example, if a promisor agrees to allow the promisee to stage a play at his or her theatre, destruction of the theatre will frustrate the contract, and excuse the promisor, even though the promise was made in absolute terms. In truth, the unqualified statement in Paradine v Jane is not consistent with the modern law of frustration.13 [33-04] Contracts to which the doctrine applies. The doctrine has been applied, and the following kinds of contracts held to be frustrated:
construction contracts;14 [page 757] contractual licences;15 employment contracts;16 contracts for the sale of goods;17 voyage and time charterparties;18 trading agreements;19 and contracts between the members of an unincorporated association.20 Although this list does not purport to be exhaustive, it does indicate the variety of contexts in which the doctrine has been applied. It also illustrates the ‘flexibility’21 of the doctrine. Therefore, although contracts involving land still give rise to certain difficulties,22 the general principle, undoubtedly, is that prima facie the doctrine is applicable to any type of contract.
Law or Fact? [33-05] Frustration a conclusion of law. Where a court or commercial arbitrator concludes that a particular contract has (or has not) been frustrated, that conclusion is one of law.23 There are two reasons for this. First, the conclusion always involves a consideration of the terms of the contract, and the proper construction of contractual documents is an issue of law, not fact.24 Second, the application of the concept of frustration to the circumstances relied upon as frustrating the contract involves the application of a legal principle.25 [33-06] Factual elements. Where an event is relied upon as frustrating the contract, the event is ‘something which happens in the world of fact’.26 [page 758] This factual element explains why the question of frustration is sometimes said
to be a ‘mixed’ question of law and fact.27 In other words, in reaching the conclusion of law, due regard must be had to the evidence relied upon as frustrating the contract. Sometimes the factual element of frustration will be extremely important, for example, in cases where an event has caused delay in performance.28 The factual element is emphasised in English cases where a marked reluctance has been shown to interfere with the conclusions of commercial arbitrators. Because the assessment of matters such as delay is often largely a matter of impression on which opinions are likely to differ, the view has been taken that it is wrong to interfere with the arbitrator’s conclusion unless the wrong test has been applied, or a perverse or unreasonable conclusion was reached.29 Because of the factual element, the relevant conclusion of law will, in many cases, be ‘almost completely determined’30 by what the judge or arbitrator determines as the commercial significance of the event relied upon as frustrating the contract. Nevertheless, as Lord Diplock said in Pioneer Shipping Ltd v BTP Tioxide Ltd,31 no matter how closely the conclusion of law may seem to follow from findings about the commercial significance of differences found to exist between what the parties bargained for and their position after the occurrence of the event relied upon as frustrating the contract, frustration is ‘never a pure question of fact’.
Evidence of Frustration [33-07] Data for decision. In Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd v James B Fraser & Co Ltd32 Lord Wright explained that where frustration is alleged to have taken place the data for reaching a decision on the issue are: (1) the terms and construction of the contract; and (2) the events which have occurred. Of course, it goes without saying that the person deciding the issue must also apply the legal test for frustration. [33-08] Construction of the contract. Assuming that the contract is in or evidenced by writing, construction of the contract involves the interpretation of a written document and is a question of law to which the
[page 759] parol evidence rule applies.33 If the parties have expressly dealt with the event relied upon as frustrating the contract then the position is, subject to considerations of public policy in the case of illegality, governed by the express terms.34 Assuming that the parties have not expressly dealt with the event, or not dealt with it sufficiently, the contract must be construed in the light of the circumstances existing at the time when it was made.35 It is legitimate to have regard to the circumstances surrounding the contract, that is, the ‘factual matrix’ against which it was entered into.36 Such evidence may enable the court to identify a common assumption of the parties which was essential to the contract,37 or the ‘foundation’, ‘substance’ or ‘basis’ of the contract.38 [33-09] Evidence of the event. Evidence of the event relied upon as frustrating the contract is not admitted for the purpose of construing it and the parol evidence rule has no relevance.39 The purpose of the evidence is to show that the contract cannot be performed in the way contemplated by the parties. Generally, the question of frustration must be considered at the time when the event relied upon as frustrating the contract occurred.40 Later events, such as conduct of the parties, may be some evidence of the view to be taken by ‘informed minds’,41 but is not conclusive. Thus, in cases where a party to the contract has acted on the basis that the contract was frustrated, and behaved as an ‘informed’ commercial person would, that party is generally permitted to invoke the doctrine even though subsequent events show that the contract would not have been frustrated. [33-10] Relevance of prior cases. It may be helpful, when considering whether a given event has frustrated a particular contract, to look at the impact of similar events on similar types of contracts. However, each fact situation must be considered on its own merits and the conclusion to be reached will seldom, if ever, be dictated by an earlier decision. Even where a particular event, such as the closure of the Shatt-al-Arab waterway in 1980 by the war between Iran and Iraq, is likely to frustrate a large number of contracts, no two cases will be identical. Thus, the House of Lords in Kodros Shipping Corp of Monrovia v Empresa Cubana de Fletes
[page 760] (The Evia (No 2))42 saw no conflict between the decision of the commercial arbitrator in that case and earlier decisions in which arbitrators had found similar charterparty contracts in respect of vessels trapped in the waterway to have been frustrated on a different date from that chosen by the arbitrator. That was because the charterparties in question may well have been of ‘differing characteristics and of different lengths’. The question, therefore, is not whether one case resembles another but whether, applying the test of frustration, the particular circumstances of the case justify the invocation of the doctrine.43
Scope of the Doctrine Impossibility of Performance [33-11] Scope of impossibility. Most cases of frustration involve an element of impossibility. Obviously that includes cases where performance by either (or both) of the parties is physically impossible, for example, because the subject matter of the contract has been destroyed. In addition, the legal concept of impossibility encompasses situations where performance is not literally impossible, but is ‘impracticable in a commercial sense’.44 [33-12] Destruction of subject matter. The doctrine of frustration first emerged in cases where specific subject matter had been destroyed (or perished) without the fault of either party. For example, in Taylor v Caldwell45 the defendants agreed to allow the plaintiffs to use the Surrey Gardens and Music Hall for four days in July and August 1861 for the purpose of concerts and fetes. On 11 June the Music Hall was destroyed by fire. The court held that the contract was discharged by this event as the Music Hall was essential to the performance of the contract. It is important to identify the subject matter of the contract. For example, in Turner v Goldsmith46 the defendants employed the plaintiff to sell goods ‘manufactured or sold’ by them. The contract was not frustrated by the destruction of the defendants’ factory because the subject matter was not confined to goods which they manufactured.
The fact that the subject matter of the contract has been destroyed will not amount to frustration if either party has agreed, expressly or impliedly, to bear the risk of destruction, or guaranteed that the subject matter will remain in existence.47 For example, under the sale of goods legislation48 an [page 761] agreement to sell specific goods is ‘avoided’ (frustrated) if the goods ‘perish before the risk passes to the buyer’. Although the risk of destruction frequently passes at the time when property in the goods is transferred to the buyer, this is not necessarily the case. However, once the risk has passed, destruction of the goods does not frustrate the contract and the buyer will be liable to the seller. [33-13] Availability of subject matter. Even if the subject matter of the contract remains in existence, the contract may be frustrated if it ceases to be available to the parties. For example, in Hirji Mulji v Cheong Yue SS Co Ltd49 a time charterparty entered into on 17 November 1916 provided that the vessel should be placed at the charterers’ disposal for 10 months from 1 March 1917. Shortly before that date the vessel was requisitioned, and it continued in government service until late in February 1919. At the latest the contract was frustrated in the latter part of 1917, when it was clear that the vessel could not be made available to the charterers.50 The fact that the subject matter will not be available for the entire period of the contract need not frustrate its performance: regard must be had to the delay which is likely to occur.51 Where the contemplated duration of the contract is long, a temporary unavailability will not amount to frustration. For example, in F A Tamplin SS Co Ltd v Anglo-Mexican Petroleum Products Co Ltd52 a fiveyear time charterparty was not frustrated when requisition caused the vessel to be unavailable. The charter had nearly three years to run, and release of the vessel might well take place in time to allow performance of a significant proportion of the contract. [33-14] Availability of source of supply. Where a supplier’s source is not available to satisfy the requirements of a contract, the question of frustration depends on two matters: (1) the reason the source is not available; and (2) the scope of the supplier’s promise.
If a supplier’s source is not available because of external events, such as government prohibition or destruction by fire, flood and so on, the supplier may be in a position to invoke the doctrine of frustration. On the other hand, if the failure is due simply to a decision to supply another person who has offered a higher price, the doctrine will not be applicable because the ‘frustration’ is ‘selfinduced’.53 A supplier who has expressly or impliedly agreed to bear the risk of a particular source not being available will be unable to invoke the doctrine, should that source not be available to satisfy the contract. For example, if a seller has agreed to sell ‘New South Wales wheat’ of a specified quality, with the intention of obtaining a supply of goods from a contract with a particular dealer, acquisition of that dealer’s wheat by the government does not constitute frustration.54 On the other hand, where the contract [page 762] identifies a particular source, such as the crop to be grown on the seller’s land, frustration will occur if, through no fault of the seller, the crop fails.55 [33-15] Death and incapacity. Where the performance of a contract has a personal element, death or incapacity may frustrate its performance. For example, the death of an employee frustrates a contract of employment.56 Similarly, frustration will occur if an artist engaged to prepare a drawing is ‘attacked with blindness’.57 Thus, in Simmons Ltd v Hay58 a printery engineer was permanently incapacitated by illness, so that he was not able to discharge his contractual duties, and the contract of employment was frustrated. In cases of temporary incapacity, the issue of frustration will depend on the kind of contract, the extent of incapacity and its expected duration. For example, if a pianist is unable to give a concert because of illness, the contract will be discharged if only one concert is anticipated. Thus, the pianist will not be liable to pay damages for breach and the employer is entitled to cancel the concert.59 In Horlock v Beal60 the detention of a vessel by German authorities in the First World War was held to frustrate the contract of employment between a member of the crew and the owner of the vessel because it made it impossible for the crew members to perform their duties. Where the contract does not involve a specific task, but instead envisages a
long-term relationship, it will be more difficult to establish that the contract has been frustrated by a temporary incapacity. Apart from the difficulty of identifying the period of the incapacity, and its impact on the contract, modern contracts of employment frequently contain provisions dealing with sickness benefits. These may leave little room for discharge under the doctrine of frustration.61 But if an employee is incapacitated for what will, in all probability, be an unreasonably long period of time, the contract must usually be frustrated. If the contract is frustrated the parties are discharged and, for example, an employee is not to be regarded as in breach of contract by not turning [page 763] up for work. However, it should not be assumed that a conclusion that the contract has not been frustrated necessarily means the incapacitated party is liable in damages. In fact, almost invariably the party in question, for example, an incapacitated employee, is temporarily excused from performance.62 [33-16] Contemplated method of performance not possible. Where parties contract on the basis that their bargain will be performed in a particular way, and that method of performance is not possible, the contract may be discharged under the doctrine of frustration. For example, in Cornish & Co v Kanematsu63 a contract for the sale of goods provided that shipment was to be made ‘per P & O steamer sailing from Japan about the 7 September and coming direct to Sydney’. However, no such vessel was despatched and so the mode of performance contemplated became impossible. The court held that the contract was frustrated.64 The decision can be contrasted with Tsakiroglou & Co Ltd v Noblee Thorl GmbH,65 where a CIF contract for the sale of Sudanese groundnuts, to be delivered at Hamburg, was not frustrated by closure of the Suez Canal. The parties contemplated shipment from Port Sudan, and the seller intended to send the goods through the Canal. After its closure the performance of the contract was still possible since the goods could have been sent via the Cape of Good Hope. The court held that this change in the method of performance was not so material as to frustrate the contract. The position might have been different had the goods been of a more perishable kind. [33-17] Increased burden of performance. Generally, the fact that the
performance of a contract has become more onerous because of the occurrence of an event not contemplated by the parties to the contract does not amount to frustration. For example, in another of the Suez Canal cases, Ocean Tramp Tankers Corp v V/O Sovfracht (The Eugenia),66 the closure of the Canal did not frustrate a charterparty even though a voyage from Odessa to India around the Cape would have taken 138 days, and a voyage through the Canal some 30 days less. On the other hand, in Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales,67 an increase in the burden of performance did amount to frustration. The contractors’ burden of performance was increased when the issue of an injunction delayed the carrying out of excavation work required by the contract. The High Court considered that the situation created by the injunction was radically different from anything [page 764] contemplated by the parties.68 The parties had fixed a specific period of time within which the work was to be completed while labouring under the misapprehension that the contractors would have the benefit of the Rail Authority’s statutory immunity from injunction for nuisance. The lack of immunity severely disrupted the parties’ calculations. Performance had not simply become more onerous, performance in the way contemplated by the parties had become impossible.
Frustration of Purpose [33-18] The principle of Krell v Henry. An extension of the doctrine of frustration was made in Krell v Henry,69 one of the ‘Coronation Cases’. The plaintiff hired a flat in Pall Mall to the defendant for 26 and 27 June 1902. Although not mentioned in the contract, its purpose was to enable the defendant to view the Royal Coronation procession of Edward VII, a point reflected by the fact that the hire was for the days ‘but not the nights’. The procession was cancelled owing to the King’s illness and the court held that this frustrated the contract. The basis for the decision was that the procession was ‘regarded by both contracting parties as the foundation of the contract’.70 The decision did not therefore depend on impossibility. There was nothing impossible in doing what
the parties had agreed to do. Rather, performance was rendered ‘pointless’.71 [33-19] Uncontemplated turn of events not necessarily sufficient. The mere fact that an event which was not contemplated by the parties when they entered into the contract has occurred does not amount to frustration.72 The purpose of the contract must be frustrated, that is, the facts must involve the ‘cessation or non-existence of an express condition or state of things going to the root of the contract, and essential to its performance’.73 The point is illustrated by Herne Bay Steam Boat Co v Hutton,74 another of the Coronation Cases. The plaintiffs agreed to place one of their vessels at the defendant’s disposal on 28 and 29 June 1902 ‘for the purpose of seeing the naval review and for a day’s cruise round the fleet’. Owing to the King’s illness the review was cancelled and the defendant argued that this frustrated the purpose of the contract. However, the court held that as the review was not the foundation of the contract it was not frustrated by the cancellation of the review. The event which had happened did not make the contract pointless and the defendant could still employ the vessel in a cruise around the fleet. [33-20] Disappointed expectations. Events frequently occur which cause the expectations of contracting parties to be disappointed. However, [page 765] disappointment is not synonymous with frustration, and the purpose of a contract is not frustrated merely because the benefits which a party expected to obtain from its performance are not realised in full.75 For example, in Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd76 two contracts for the hire of neon signs were not frustrated when governmental orders prohibited the signs being illuminated. The orders were made as security measures during the Second World War and were indefinite in duration. No doubt the hirers’ expectations were to some extent disappointed, but the owners did not guarantee that the signs could be illuminated and the orders did not interfere with the performance of the contracts. The hirers were taken to have agreed to bear the risk that the use of the signs might be affected.77
Illegality
[33-21] Concern with supervening illegality. The topic of illegality was dealt with earlier78 from the point of view of contracts void or unenforceable at the time of formation. The present concern is with supervening illegality, that is, cases in which the performance of the contract becomes illegal after formation but before it has been discharged by performance. The distinction between the two cases cannot always be maintained. For example, a contract may require a government consent or licence and be perfectly legal because of a term in the contract requiring one of the parties to obtain the consent or licence. If the consent or licence cannot be obtained or is revoked, the performance of the contract becomes illegal, and may therefore be frustrated. Thus, in Gamerco SA v ICM/Fair Warning (Agency) Ltd79 the plaintiffs — concert promoters in Spain — obtained a permit to stage the defendants’ concert at a particular stadium in Madrid. The venue was found to be unsafe and the permit was revoked. Garland J held that the contract was frustrated when the use of the stadium was banned. It is not clear whether this was a decision that frustration occurred because performance at the agreed venue had become impossible, or a decision that frustration occurred because performance became illegal. The better view is that the contract was frustrated by subsequent illegality rather than the construction defect. Nevertheless, a contract is not necessarily void for illegality or frustrated if a valid licence cannot be obtained, since the party who promised to obtain the consent or licence may have taken the risk of that eventuality.80 [33-22] Impossibility and illegality. Discharge by supervening illegality, while frequently dealt with under the heading ‘frustration’, is a common [page 766] law rule of general application81 and much wider than the doctrine of frustration.82 In cases where the illegality results from the application of a foreign law the discharge of the parties arises because of impossibility. For example, if A, in country X, agrees to sell goods to B, in country Y, and the contract provides for delivery at a port in Y, frustration by illegality may occur if the government of Y prohibits importation of goods of the kind dealt with by the contract. Although in all other cases the discharge has a wider basis than impossibility, the legal
consequences of the discharge are, at common law, the same as under the doctrine of frustration.83 [33-23] Contracts with the enemy. Where the performance of a contract involves trading with the enemy during war-time the contract will be regarded as illegal and frustrated. For example, in Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd84 an English company agreed to sell machinery to a Polish company and to deliver the machinery at Gdynia, Poland. When Poland was occupied by German forces during the course of the Second World War prior to delivery, the contract became illegal and its performance was regarded as frustrated. The decision can be contrasted with Cooper & Sons v Neilson & Maxwell Ltd,85 where a contract for the sale of ‘Continental steel shoeing bars’ was not frustrated by illegality even though the seller had intended to obtain the goods from Germany. The seller could obtain the goods from another country without trading with a German supplier since the contract did not require the seller to obtain the goods from any particular source. [33-24] Disappearance of the foundation of the contract. In cases which do not involve trading with the enemy it may be difficult to decide whether the contract is frustrated when affected by illegality. Decisions such as Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd86 illustrate the obvious point that the mere fact that a party cannot enjoy the full benefit of the contract because of supervening illegality does not give rise to frustration. On the other hand, if the foundation of the contract disappears because of illegality it must be regarded as frustrated. For example, in Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd v James B Fraser & Co Ltd87 a trading agreement provided, inter alia, for the purchase of pine wood. Subsequently, an order was made under the Defence Regulations (UK) which had the effect of making it illegal for the sellers to supply the timber at the price stipulated, and a later order prevented the importation of timber as contemplated by the contract. The House of Lords held that as the trading in timber was the ‘main object’ of the contract it was frustrated once trading became illegal. [page 767] The Denny Mott case also illustrates that illegality which may be only temporary can frustrate a contract. Assume that a contract requires work to be done, but the work is interrupted. Frustration will occur if the interruption to the contract will in all probability be so long as to destroy the identity of the work
when resumed, with the work when interrupted.88
Delay89 [33-25] The criterion for delay. The fact that an event not contemplated by the parties causes some delay in performance, or renders impossible performance at the appointed time, need not amount to frustration. In order for the delay to give rise to frustration it must be such as radically to alter the performance of the contract. For example, in Jackson v Union Marine Insurance Co Ltd90 a charterparty provided that the vessel would proceed with all possible dispatch from Liverpool to Newport for the purpose of loading a cargo of iron rails which were to be transported to San Francisco. On its way to Newport the vessel ran aground. The delay involved in repairing the vessel would have been prolonged. The jury found that the time taken would have been so long as to make it unreasonable to require the charterers to supply the agreed cargo. The Exchequer Chamber held that this finding justified a decision that the contract was frustrated, because the delay would have made the venture one entirely different from that contemplated by the contract. Although the court in Jackson v Union Marine Insurance spoke in terms of ‘unreasonable’ delay91 it is now accepted, in commercial contracts at least, that it is preferable to speak in terms of ‘frustrating’ delay.92 Whether the criterion is satisfied is a question of fact.93 [33-26] Time for assessment. The general rule of frustration, that the impact of an event relied on as a frustrating event must be assessed at the time of its occurrence,94 is relevant to cases of delay.95 However, this gives rise to difficulty since it will rarely be certain how long the interruption to performance will last. In commercial contracts, where certainty is essential, the parties must be entitled to act when they come to know of the delay.96 In such contracts the applicable principle is that stated by Scrutton J in Embiricos v Sydney Reid & Co:97 Commercial men must not be asked to wait till the end of a long delay to find out from what in fact happens whether they are bound by a contract or
[page 768] not; they must be entitled to act on reasonable commercial probabilities at the time when they are called upon to make up their minds.
This statement, which has been approved on a number of occasions,98 indicates that a party is entitled to consider itself discharged by an event which has caused delay before the delay actually frustrates the contract. This indicates the relevance of prospective delay.99 [33-27] Prospective delay.In Jackson v Union Marine Insurance Co Ltd100 it was acknowledged that reliance may be placed on prospective delay. This is obvious enough in cases where some delay has actually occurred; but reliance may also be placed on delay which is entirely prospective. This was established in Embiricos v Sydney Reid & Co.101 The plaintiff chartered a vessel (sailing under the Greek flag) to the defendants to proceed to a port in the Sea of Azoff and there to load a cargo of grain for any direct port to the United Kingdom. The vessel passed through the Dardanelles into the Black Sea and on arrival at her loading port received some cargo. Loading was discontinued, and never resumed, when the shippers learned that Greek vessels were being seized and detained at the Dardanelles by Turkish authorities. Later, the Turkish Government allowed laden Greek vessels to pass through the Dardanelles until 24 October 1912. Although lay days were not due to expire until 22 October, it would not have been possible for the defendants to load a complete cargo and to pass through the Dardanelles within the period of the permission. The defendants therefore cancelled the charterparty. However, the period of permission was unexpectedly extended, and had the defendants waited they would have been able to load a complete cargo. Scrutton J held that even though the delay would not in fact have frustrated the contract, the defendants could invoke the doctrine of frustration. At the time of their cancellation of the charterparty reasonable commercial probabilities pointed to a frustrating delay. It did not matter that no delay had actually occurred, and the subsequent events could not be used to exclude the defendants’ defence. These cases show that a contract may be treated as discharged by frustration, on account of delay, before the frustrating delay actually occurs. However, there will be cases in which it is necessary to wait upon events in order to see whether delay will make performance radically different.102 For example, where a strike delays the performance of a contract the court may say that the parties should wait, to see how long the strike is likely to last and to determine the prospects for an early settlement of the labour dispute. Accordingly, the event relied upon must reasonably — objectively — give rise to the inference that it will cause such delay as will frustrate the contract.103 If the court decides that a reasonable person
[page 769] would not have drawn the inference of frustration, the contract is not frustrated, and a party who has treated the contract as frustrated will be regarded as having repudiated its obligation to perform the contract.
War [33-28] Outbreak of war may frustrate contract. The outbreak of war is capable of by itself frustrating a contract,104 as the cases involving trading with the enemy105 clearly indicate. However, the fact that a declaration of war impinges on performance does not necessarily indicate that frustration has occurred.106 For example, the effect may be simply to make performance more onerous,107 without making it radically different. Unless the contract involves trading with the enemy, it is usually the acts done in furtherance of war, rather than the declaration itself, which frustrates the contract. This was the position in the cases involving charterparties which were frustrated because of the trapping of vessels in the Shatt-al-Arab waterway in 1980. Frustration occurred, not because of the war between Iran and Iraq per se, but because the fighting made leaving the waterway too dangerous.108 [33-29] Impossibility and illegality. Clear cases of frustration by war involve illegality or impossibility of performance. If performance of the contract involves trading with the enemy it will be illegal.109 In Metropolitan Water Board v Dick Kerr & Co Ltd110 a construction contract was frustrated, when the Ministry of Munitions lawfully ordered the work to cease, because legal performance of the contract then became impossible. It is because the illegality must go further than merely making performance of the contract less beneficial to one of the parties that the contracts in Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd111 were not frustrated. The illumination of the signs had become illegal, but the signs had advertising value during daylight hours, and no impossibility of performance could be established. The position in Dick Kerr was different because the interruption to the work was of such a nature as radically to alter the contract. [33-30] Contracts entered into in time of war. Where a contract is entered into after war has been declared it may be difficult to establish frustration because the
parties may be assumed to have accepted the risk that the war will disrupt the contract. For example, contracts for the sale of goods made during time of war are not likely to be frustrated when the war causes delivery to be delayed.112 And in British Movietonews Ltd v London [page 770] and District Cinemas Ltd113 an agreement for the supply of newsreels was not frustrated when Defence Regulations (UK) had the effect of reducing the consumption of raw film stock even though the regulations continued to operate after the war had ended. There are, however, quite a few cases in which frustration has occurred. For example, in Comptoir d’Achat et de Vente du Boerenbond Belge SA v Luis de Ridder Limitada (The Julia)114 a contract for the sale of goods between an Argentine company and Belgian sellers was frustrated by occupation of the port of delivery by German forces. Again, in Bank Line Ltd v Arthur Capel & Co115 a charterparty entered into during the First World War was frustrated by requisition of the vessel even though the parties foresaw the possibility of requisition.116 In both cases war interfered with the performance of the contracts. In The Julia the port was invaded while the goods were in transit, so that the contract became illegal. In Bank Line the requisition was for an indefinite duration.
Contracts Involving Land General [33-31] The problem. The courts have been reluctant to extend the contractual doctrine of frustration to contracts involving land because of the distinction between property and contract. A contract involving land will frequently confer a proprietary interest on one of the parties. The interest may be equitable, as where a vendor agrees to sell land to a purchaser, or legal, as is conferred by the execution (and registration) of a lease. Allied to the theoretical problem there are at least three practical problems. First, such contracts are so common that the incidence of risk between the parties was worked out long ago, and application
of the doctrine might upset this. Second, land is much more permanent than the subject matter of most other contracts. Third, when frustration occurs, discharge is automatic117 and independent of the volition of the parties.118 Application of the doctrine to a contract involving land may therefore effect a transfer of the proprietary interest irrespective of the knowledge or wishes of the parties.
Options and sale of land contracts [33-32] Options. Although there appears to be little authority on the point, it would seem that an option to purchase or lease land is subject to the frustration doctrine. For example, the trading agreement which was held to be frustrated by illegality in Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd v James B [page 771] Fraser & Co Ltd119 contained an option to purchase (or take on long lease) a timber yard. The court did not see the existence of the option as an impediment to application of the frustration doctrine. [33-33] Sale of land. The doctrine of frustration is not likely to apply to many sale of land cases. For example, destruction of the buildings on the land by fire will not work a frustration because the risk of such destruction rests with the purchaser120 who, in any event, still has unimproved land to build on. However, the doctrine of frustration applies to an executory contract, notwithstanding that the contract confers an equitable interest on the purchaser. For example, in Wong Lai Ying v Chinachem Investment Co Ltd,121 contracts for the sale of flats in two tower blocks were frustrated by an unforeseen (and unforeseeable) landslip which ‘seriously interrupted’ the building of the blocks after building had commenced. The Privy Council emphasised that after the landslip the earliest date for completion was nearly 30 months after the latest date for completion specified by the contract. Generally speaking, in the absence of a specific provision dealing with the event, a purchaser is taken to have assumed the risk of not being able to develop or use the land in a particular way. Thus, the occurrence of an event which
prevents the purchaser developing the land in the way intended does not amount to frustration.122 However, in Austin v Sheldon,123 where six out of the seven acres which the vendor had agreed to sell were resumed, Mahoney J held that frustration had occurred.124 Since the purchaser was also held to be entitled to the compensation payable in respect of the resumption the result seems rather peculiar.125
Leases126 [33-34] Agreement for lease. In National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd127 the House of Lords said that the doctrine of frustration applies to an agreement to execute a lease of land. Although there is no Australian authority directly supporting this,128 there is indirect support in cases on the frustration of contracts for the sale of land, and the application [page 772] of the doctrine of repudiation to an agreement to execute a lease.129 In principle, if the repudiation of an agreement to execute a lease is a basis for termination by the other party, termination by frustration is a legal possibility. [33-35] Leases: English law. Until the decision of the House of Lords in National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd130 the prevailing view in England131 was that the doctrine of frustration did not apply to leaseholds. However, in the Panalpina case the majority (Lord Russell dissenting) took a contrary view, and the position in England is now settled. In reaching its decision, the majority gave the following reasons to justify the application of the doctrine. First, the distinction between land and other types of property should not be overdone; the doctrine of frustration is flexible and capable of being applied to new situations. Second, it is wrong to say that a lessee takes the risk of frustration unless the lessee has expressly agreed that a particular event, which would frustrate the lease, is to terminate the lease. Third, it is also wrong to compartmentalise contracts in a way which restricts the application of general contractual principles. For example, the doctrine
applies to contractual licences132 and it is often difficult to distinguish a licence from a lease. Fourth, the distinction between the equitable interest conferred by an agreement for a lease and the legal estate transferred by the grant of a lease does not justify the non-application of the doctrine to leases. [33-36] Leases: Australian law. The Australian authorities are in a confused state. In Halloran v Firth133 the court said that the ‘present state of the authorities shows a considerable body of legal authority in support of the proposition that the doctrine of “frustration” does not apply to a demise by which an estate in land is created and passed to the lessee’. On appeal to the High Court134 Knox CJ and Gavan Duffy J said that they agreed with the decision of the Supreme Court and the reasons given to support the conclusion that there was no frustration of the lease in issue. Although Isaacs J agreed with the Supreme Court’s decision, he rejected the proposition that the doctrine can never be applied to leases. As a matter of precedent one would have thought that the High Court’s decision in Firth would be conclusive against the application of the doctrine in Australia.135 However, the decision did not achieve any prominence in the subsequent decisions. For example, in Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v [page 773] Tooheys Ltd136 Williams J said that the doctrine is only excluded by the lessee taking possession, and in Minister of State for the Army v Dalziel137 he relied on English authority138 for the proposition that the ‘doctrine of frustration does not apply to leases’. More puzzling still is the fact that Ligertwood J, in Shiell v Symons,139 and McClemens J in Robertson v Wilson,140 should consider themselves free from any binding authority and justified in treating the leases there in issue as frustrated. And, when Walsh J in Thearle v Keeley141 considered himself bound by authority to hold that the doctrine does not apply, he relied principally on English cases. Notwithstanding the uncertainty apparent in the cases referred to above, the State and Territory Supreme Courts remain bound by Firth. However, for two reasons it is suggested that when the High Court considers this issue it will decide that the doctrine applies to leases. First, there is the fact that in Codelfa
Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales142 the court approved certain passages in National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd.143 Second, it is now clear that the doctrine of repudiation applies to leases.144 [33-37] Circumstances in which the doctrine might apply.Accepting the argument that ultimately the doctrine of frustration will be applied to leaseholds in Australia, the circumstances in which the doctrine might apply may be considered. However, account must be taken of the opinion of the majority in National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd145 that the doctrine will rarely operate to frustrate a lease. In Cricklewood Property and Investment Trust Ltd v Leighton’s Investment Trust Ltd146 Viscount Simon said that, in a simple lease for a term of years under which the lessee is free to use the land as the lessee wishes, he could not imagine frustration occurring unless some ‘vast convulsion of nature swallowed up the property altogether, or buried it in the depths of the sea’. However, less catastrophic events may frustrate a lease. In the Panalpina case Lord Hailsham LC and Lord Simon said147 that coastal erosion would do equally as well. [page 774] When considering the impact of any event, consideration must be given to the duration of the lease and its object. The longer the term of the lease the more serious must be the event. For example, a long lease is not likely to be frustrated by requisitioning of the property, if it will keep the lessee out of possession for only a few years. A ‘singularly harsh decision’148 from the lessee’s point of view was reached in Matthey v Curling.149 Possession of demised premises was taken by military authorities towards the end of a 21 year lease and the lessee kept out of possession until after the expiry of the term. The lessee was held bound by his covenant to rebuild when the premises were destroyed by fire during the occupation, notwithstanding that their destruction was not his fault, because the temporary occupation did not frustrate the lease. In commercial and building leases it is, theoretically at least, ‘less difficult’150 to establish a case of frustration. However, in the Cricklewood case a 99-year building lease was not frustrated by war-time building restrictions. And in Panalpina a 10-year lease of warehouse premises was not frustrated when the only access to the warehouse ceased to be available due to a road closure,
notwithstanding that it was of a ‘sort that might be frustrated’.151 On the facts the interruption was only likely to last about 20 months and the lessees would be able to use the warehouse for nearly three years after the interruption ceased. The type of lease most likely to be frustrated is a short-term residential lease where the main purpose is habitation of the buildings on the land. For example, demolition of the premises pursuant to the order of a health authority as part of a slum clearance program would in all likelihood frustrate the lease.152
Foresight and Terms Dealing with Frustration Foresight of the Event153 [33-38] Event must generally be unforeseen. Although not reproduced in Lord Radcliffe’s statement of the concept of frustration in Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC,154 it is usually said that the event relied upon as frustrating the contract must not have been foreseen by the parties.155 In fact, he said156 that one reason why a shortage of labour did not frustrate the construction contract being considered was that the [page 775] ‘possibility of enough labour and materials not being available was before their eyes and could have been the subject of special contractual stipulation’. Therefore, if the event was foreseen, and the contract contains no provision covering the event, the inference will usually be drawn that the parties agreed to bear the risk of the occurrence of the event. The contract will not be frustrated. As against the body of authority supporting the general proposition stated above, there is a statement by Lord Denning MR in Ocean Tramp Tankers Corp v V/O Sovfracht (The Eugenia):157 It has frequently been said that the doctrine of frustration only applies when the new situation is ‘unforeseen’ or ‘unexpected’ or ‘uncontemplated’, as if that were an essential feature. But it is not so. The only thing that is essential is that the parties should have made no provision for it in their contract. The only relevance of it being ‘unforeseen’ is this: If the parties did not foresee anything of the kind
happening, you can readily infer they have made no provision for it: whereas, if they did foresee it, you would expect them to make provision for it.
However, this statement arguably confuses the question of construction to be dealt with shortly,158 namely, whether the parties have dealt with the event relied upon as frustrating the contract, with the issue of whether the absence of a specific provision implies that either (or both) of the parties agreed to bear the risk of the event. It is also arguable that Lord Denning assumed too wide a criterion of foresight. The mere fact that the parties foresaw an event of the same kind as that relied upon is not a sufficient ground for saying that the event was foreseen.159 [33-39] Extent of foresight required. The extent of foresight required has not been the subject of detailed discussion in the authorities. Three points are, however, consistent with the authorities. First, the fact that the parties foresaw the possibility of the cause of the frustrating event occurring is not sufficient. For example, the parties to a charterparty might foresee the possibility of the vessel being delayed by hostilities, and make provision for an alternative loading port. The fact that the same hostilities prevent loading at the alternative port does not necessarily mean that the doctrine is excluded, since the parties may not have foreseen the possibility of delay at the alternative port for a long period of time. Second, it would seem that a fairly strict standard of foreseeability applies. The parties must be found to have foreseen the occurrence of the event as a serious possibility. The fact that the event was reasonably foreseeable is not sufficient to exclude the doctrine. For example, in Simmons Ltd v Hay160 the employers knew, at the time when the plaintiff was employed as a printery engineer, that he was not a well man, but they could not reasonably have contemplated that he would suffer a disease of a permanently incapacitating character. [page 776] Third, the fact that the parties have foreseen the possibility that performance might be interfered with or interrupted, for example, by war or illness, does not necessarily prevent the contract being discharged by frustration. The extent of the interference or interruption may be much greater than anything contemplated. For example, in WJ Tatem Ltd v Gamboa161 the defendant chartered a ship from the plaintiffs during the Spanish Civil War for 30 days. It
was assumed that the parties contemplated the possibility of the vessel being seized and detained by the Nationalists, but the occurrence of this event was nevertheless held to frustrate the contract because the vessel had been detained for a period of time which was much longer than anything contemplated.
Terms Dealing with Frustration [33-40] Scope of contractual provisions. Whether or not a contractual provision deals with the event relied upon as frustrating the contract in such a way as to prevent the parties being discharged under the doctrine of frustration depends on the construction of the contract.162 If the contract contains express provisions which indicate sufficiently the consequences which are to result from the occurrence of the event the parties’ rights will be regulated by the express terms, and there will be no room for the operation of the doctrine.163 For example, in Claude Neon Ltd v Hardie164 a contract for the hire of a neon sign was not frustrated by the resumption of the premises on which the sign was erected because of a term in the contract providing that the hirer was to be ‘deemed to have made default’ under the contract in the event of, inter alia, his ‘interest’ in the premises being ‘extinguished or transferred’. The resumption was held to be an event within the clause, and since the parties had clearly indicated the result which was to flow, namely, default under the contract, there was no room for discharge under the doctrine of frustration. More frequently, however, the courts have found contractual provisions to be incomplete or insufficient. For example, in Bank Line Ltd v Arthur Capel & Co165 a vessel the subject of a time charterparty was requisitioned by the British Government prior to its delivery to the charterers. Two clauses were relied on as indicating that the requisition did not frustrate the charter. Clause 26 conferred on the charterers an option to cancel if the vessel was not delivered before a certain date. Clause 31 gave the charterers an option to cancel if the vessel was commandeered by the government. The House of Lords held that these provisions did not deal completely with [page 777]
the event relied on (by the owners) as frustrating the contract. Clause 26 was not inconsistent with the owners being automatically discharged by an event which produced a radical change in the nature of the contract. And, since it dealt only with the position of the charterers, cl 31 did not exclude the possibility of a radical change resulting from a requisition of the vessel. Clause 31 gave the charterers an option to cancel in the event of requisition. For the owners to rely on frustration they had to prove more than requisition. It was also necessary for the requisition to be such as radically to change the nature of the contract. A similar result was reached in Metropolitan Water Board v Dick Kerr & Co Ltd166 where the construction contract was frustrated when the Minister of Munitions ordered work to cease and directed the contractors to sell a large portion of their plant. Although there was a possibility that the work might be resumed at a later date, the stoppage was likely to continue for an unreasonably long period of time. A term in the contract providing for the engineer to extend the time for completion was inadequate to deal with the delay which was likely to occur. The decision was reached notwithstanding that the term purported to deal with ‘any difficulties or impediments … whatsoever or howsoever occasioned’, because the term could not be read literally. In all likelihood the interruption to the work would render the contractual obligations of the parties radically different from those contemplated. [33-41] Public policy. A contractual provision which would otherwise be effective to exclude the operation of the doctrine of frustration is not enforceable if contrary to public policy. This is clearly the case where a contract involves trading with the enemy.167 For example, in Ertel Bieber & Co v Rio Tinto Co Ltd168 contracts for the supply of sulphur contained terms providing for the suspension of the parties’ obligations in the event of prevention of performance by, inter alia, war. The suppliers were an English company and the buyers German companies. Once war between England and Germany was declared the contracts became illegal because performance would involve trading with the enemy. The illegality frustrated the contracts, notwithstanding the suspensory terms. Either the terms did not extend to the event which had occurred or, if they did so extend, the terms were contrary to public policy and unenforceable. [33-42] Frustration under a contractual term. Even if the occurrence of an event does not frustrate a contract under the common law, the event may bring into play an express term providing for the discharge of the parties. For example, a contract for the sale of goods might provide for its cancellation in the event of shipment of the goods proving to be impossible during the contract period by
reason of a government prohibition.169 An event within such a clause provides a defence for failure to perform irrespective of whether the event would also have frustrated the contract. [page 778] Where an express term merely protects one of the parties, the doctrine of frustration, if applied, will excuse or discharge the other. For example, in Jackson v Union Marine Insurance Co Ltd170 the failure of the vessel to arrive in time for the voyage was caused by an excepted peril and the charterers therefore had no cause of action against the shipowner. The court held that the charterers were discharged, not by any express term of the contract, but, instead, under the doctrine of frustration.
Self-induced Frustration171 [33-43] No frustration where event self-induced. Lord Radcliffe’s statement of the frustration172 concept posits the absence of ‘default’ by either of the parties. Where the event relied on as frustrating the contract occurs because of ‘blame’, ‘fault’ or ‘default’, the contract is not frustrated because reliance cannot be placed on self-induced frustration. Frustration may be regarded as self-induced by reason of default arising from an act or an omission by the parties. For example, in Maritime National Fish Ltd v Ocean Trawlers Ltd,173 charterers of a steam trawler sought to rely on the failure of a Minister to license the vessel’s use of an otter trawl as frustrating their contract with the owners of the vessel. Because the vessel was fitted with a trawl the licence was essential to its use, as required by the contract, in the fishing industry. However, the Privy Council held that any frustration of the contract had been self-induced. The Minister had granted three licences for the charterers’ five trawlers and it was their decision not to apply one of these licences to the vessel under the charterparty. A more recent illustration is provided by J Lauritzen AS v Wijsmuller BV (The Super Servant Two),174 where a contract for the carriage of a large and heavy drilling rig provided for carriage of the rig by either the Super Servant One or the Super Servant Two, at the carriers’ option.175 Prior to carriage of the goods the Super Servant Two, on which the defendants intended to transport the rig, became a total loss. Although there had been no intimation to the plaintiffs of the
intention to use the vessel (the carriers’ option was not exercised), the defendants contended that the loss of the Super Servant Two, and the unavailability of the other vessel due to commitments to other persons, frustrated the contract of carriage. The argument was rejected by the court since the contract did not oblige them to use the Super Servant Two. Their inability to use the other vessel was, for the purposes of self-induced frustration, their own fault. [33-44] Must the act or omission be deliberate? Although there is no doubt that a deliberate act by one of the parties is sufficient to constitute [page 779] self-induced frustration176 (assuming that the act involves default), it is doubtful whether this is necessary. In Joseph Constantine SS Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting Corp Ltd177 Viscount Simon LC said that ‘default’ is a ‘much wider term and in many commercial cases dealing with frustration is treated as equivalent to negligence’. However, he leftopen the question whether, in a contract for personal services, personal incapacity arising from want of care would be sufficient.178 In J Lauritzen AS v Wijsmuller BV (The Super Servant Two)179 the English Court of Appeal treated negligence as sufficient to prevent reliance on frustration, at least where it is a cause of the event alleged to constitute frustration. [33-45] Must the act or omission involve a breach of contract? The clearest case of self-induced frustration is where a party’s default not only causes the frustrating event to occur but also amounts to a breach of contract.180 However, a deliberate act which frustrates the contract, by preventing performance, is usually within the ambit of the ‘default’ concept even if not a breach of an express term of the contract.181 And in Paal Wilson & Co A/S v Partenreederei Hannah Blumenthal182 Lord Diplock said that an omission not amounting to a breach of contract can be sufficient to preclude reliance by that party on frustration. [33-46] Onus of proof.On whom does the onus of proof lie in cases where frustration is alleged to be self-induced? Is it on the party who makes the allegation, or must the party who relies on the doctrine prove that there was no default on his or her part? In Joseph Constantine SS Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting
Corp Ltd183 the House of Lords held that the onus is on the party who makes the allegation that frustration was self-induced. In that case a vessel the subject of a charterparty was damaged by an explosion which rendered it impossible for the vessel to perform under the charterparty. The cause of the explosion could not be established, and the owners were able to invoke the doctrine of frustration because the charterers could not establish that the explosion occurred by reason of the owners’ default. The upshot of the Constantine case is that a party is not disentitled to rely on the doctrine by the mere possibility that the event alleged to frustrate the contract occurred as a result of its default. The placement of the onus of proof seems both logical and satisfactory. Usually, the allegation of self-induced frustration is made to support a claim of damages for breach of contract, and since the onus of proving the existence of a breach is on the party who makes the allegation,184 it is logical to require that party to prove [page 780] the existence of default where the defence of frustration is raised. It is notoriously difficult to prove a negative, and therefore satisfactory that the party who relies on frustration should not be required to prove the absence of default. It is doubtful, however, whether the Constantine case supports the view that an allegation of frustration is of itself sufficient to require the other party to prove that frustration was self-induced. In some cases a prima facie case of breach will be established simply by proving that a promisor has not performed. In these cases the promisor must produce evidence of frustration in order to require the other party to prove that any ‘frustration’ was self-induced.185 One other point about the onus of proof deserves mention as it was to some extent relied upon in the Constantine case. Most descriptions of the concept of frustration refer to the absence of default by either party.186 If the onus were on the party invoking the doctrine to prove that frustration was not self-induced there would, logically, be a need to prove not only the absence of default by that party but also by the other party.187 This would be unreasonable and unduly restrictive. A party may rely on frustration, even if the other party is at fault, where the claim is to be discharged from the contract. Proof of the existence of fault should be required only if a claim for damages is also made, in which case it is necessary to establish that default amounted to a breach of contract. This
analysis is supported by F C Shepherd & Co Ltd v Jerrom188 where it was held that the sentencing of an employee to a custodial term for criminal conduct may be relied on by the employer as frustrating the contract, even though the delay in performance is in a sense caused by wrongful conduct on the part of the employee. [33-47] Causation. There must be an element of causation between the default of the promisor and the ‘frustration’ of the contract. For example, in Ocean Tramp Tankers Corp v V/O Sovfracht (The Eugenia)189 the charterers could not rely on the closure of the Suez Canal, even if it had frustrated the contract, as they had ordered the vessel to enter it and breached a term of the contract in doing so. It is clear, however, that the default need not be the sole cause of frustration.190 Where there is no causal connection between the default of the promisor and the frustration of the contract, frustration cannot be regarded as self-induced. Therefore, the parties will be discharged.191 [page 781] [33-48] Both parties in default. If both parties are in default, because each has contributed to the occurrence of the event relied on as frustrating the contract, neither may rely on it and the contract is not frustrated.192
Basis of the Doctrine [33-49] Construction. The acceptance of Lord Radcliffe’s formulation of the concept of frustration193 implies that the doctrine is primarily based on the construction of the contract.194 The court can only decide what a party promised to do by construing the contract and the modern cases emphasise construction as the most satisfactory basis for the doctrine.195 It is nevertheless still useful to consider some of the other theories put forward over the years, and to ask whether the choice of theory actually has any significance. [33-50] Implied term. Initially, the implied term theory was adopted as the basis of the doctrine, so that whenever the doctrine operated it was because the court
could imply a term into the contract providing for the discharge of the parties.196 The implied term theory has been attacked on a number of grounds. In Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd197 Diplock LJ said that once the event has occurred, and the parties have been discharged, it is unnecessary to say that, in addition, there was an implied term to this effect. The theory also smacks of fiction198 since it is difficult to conceive of an officious bystander199 being suppressed in relation to a matter which the parties did not have in their contemplation.200 In Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd v James B Fraser & Co Ltd201 Lord Wright said that the theory does not explain why the term is implied. Finally, there is the problem that at common law the consequences of frustration are often very [page 782] severe on one of the parties.202 Therefore, it is by no means clear that the parties, as reasonable persons, would both have agreed to the term finally implied.203 [33-51] Just solution. In Hirji Mulji v Cheong Yue SS Co Ltd,204 Lord Sumner (for the Privy Council), described the frustration doctrine as ‘really a device, by which the rules as to absolute contracts are reconciled with a special exception which justice demands’. Lord Wright accepted this as the best theory for the doctrine in Joseph Constantine SS Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting Corp Ltd,205 and said that the ‘doctrine is invented by the court in order to supplement the defects of the actual contract’.206 Although it might seem strange that the theory preferred by two of the greatest authorities on the law of contract is not applied today, the just solution theory is not supported as the basis of the doctrine. In Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd207 Latham CJ objected to its uncertainty. More recently, in National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd208 Lord Hailsham LC said that although the formulation of Lord Sumner ‘admirably expresses the purpose of the doctrine, it does not provide it with any theoretical basis at all’. In any event, if the contract is absolute in character, the doctrine does not apply,209 and the doctrine is more concerned with whether an obligation which is framed in unconditional terms should be interpreted as absolute in character. In other words, although the court may be searching for a just construction which accords with the intention of the parties,210 there is no requirement that it be ‘just’ to apply the doctrine.211
[33-52] Disappearance of foundation. ‘Disappearance of the foundation of the contract’ is sometimes put forward as the basis for frustration.212 This idea finds two different expressions in the cases. The first is where ‘foundation’ refers to commercial purpose.213 Thus, in Jackson v Union Marine Insurance Co Ltd214 the event frustrated the commercial purpose of a charterparty contract. [page 783] The second is where ‘foundation’ refers to an assumption on the basis of which the contract was agreed. This is supported by decisions such as Krell v Henry.215 However, the theory cannot explain all cases of frustration, and really begs the question of how one decides what is the ‘foundation’ of the contract. Logically, it must be construction of the contract. In fact, Jackson v Union Marine Insurance was decided on the basis of an implied term. This formulation therefore tends to merge with the construction and implied term theories.216 But, in so far as it has an independent existence, it is ‘too vague’217 to be a satisfactory explanation. [33-53] Impossibility of performance. It seems never to have been seriously suggested that impossibility of performance is the basis of the doctrine of frustration, notwithstanding that many of the cases have been decided on the ground of impossibility. There are at least two reasons for saying that impossibility is not a general explanation. First, in some cases there is no impossibility, discharge being based on, for example, frustration of purpose. Second, impossibility really only explains why one of the parties is discharged. For example, in Taylor v Caldwell218 although the destruction of the music hall made it impossible for the performances to be staged, it did not make it impossible for the hirer to pay the agreed rent. In such situations the explanation of discharge is impossibility on the one side and deprivation of benefit or failure of consideration on the other.219 The appeal of the construction theory is then its simplicity in providing a comprehensive explanation of the discharge of both parties. [33-54] Failure of consideration. At one time it was thought that the doctrine of frustration applied only to executory contracts, where the doctrine could be based on a total failure of consideration caused by the frustrating event. However, the doctrine has been applied to partially executed contracts,220 and a
theory based on failure of consideration cannot be applied to such cases because of the general rule221 that a failure of consideration must be total.222 The theory also has the same defect as a theory based on impossibility, namely, that it does not explain why both parties are discharged. [page 784] [33-55] Mistake.223 It is sometimes said that the concepts of common mistake224 and frustration are related.225 Clearly, both deal with the impact of events which were unknown to the parties when they entered into the contract. In Bank Line Ltd v Arthur Capel & Co226 Viscount Haldane considered common mistake to be a possible basis for the frustration doctrine. On the other hand, in Joseph Constantine SS Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting Corp Ltd227 Lord Wright said that mistake could only explain those cases in which specific subject matter perished. His view, that frustration and mistake are different juristic concepts, seems correct. There is, in principle, an important difference between factual errors made by both parties when they enter into an agreement and the impact of subsequent events. The law responds to this difference. Indeed, the structure of this book assumes that there is a significant contrast between cases where the intention to contract was to some extent vitiated and the (subsequent) failure of one party to discharge its contractual obligations. Although it may seem (factually) fortuitous where neither party is at fault, the same contrast informs the classification of factual circumstances as mistake or frustration. For example, in Amalgamated Investment & Property Co Ltd v John Walker & Sons Ltd228 the effect on a contract for the sale of land of inclusion of the property in a statutory list of properties of special architectural or historical interest was said to depend on when inclusion took place. If it was before the contract was entered into an issue of mistake would have arisen. But as it took place on a later date the issue was one of frustration. The facts disclosed an element of misprediction rather than mistake. The case illustrates that mistake and misprediction are different legal concepts, with different consequences. Mistake — if it has any impact — operates from the time of entry into the contract. It either renders the contract void or gives rise to a right to rescind. Misprediction can only be shown by a subsequent event which — if it amounts to frustration — discharges the parties from their respective contractual
duties.229 [33-56] Does it matter?Although the cases contain a good deal of discussion of the basis of the doctrine of frustration, they do not provide much support for the view that the choice of basis has substantive significance. For example, the fact that the construction theory has [page 785] displaced the earlier theories does not imply that any of the earlier cases were wrongly decided.230 In Joseph Constantine SS Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting Corp Ltd231 Lord Wright doubted whether the choice made would affect the decision reached in any case. Again, all the theories have been based on the presumed intention of the parties,232 or been said to depend on the ‘true meaning’ of the contract.233 Since the true meaning of any contract depends on its construction,234 construction of the contract is relevant to all theories.235 It is therefore hardly surprising that in National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd236 Lord Wilberforce should express the view that the various bases ‘shade into one another and that a choice between them is a choice of what is most appropriate to the particular contract under consideration’. Thus, in Panalpina itself, Lord Simon237 pointed out that application of the total failure of consideration theory would have been ‘incompatible’ with the application of the doctrine to a lease. And in Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales238 the High Court held that a construction contract was frustrated even though no term, dealing with the situation created by the events which had occurred, could be implied. On the other hand, in Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC239 Lord Reid thought the choice between the foundation of the contract theory and the construction theory to be important. His view was that on the foundation theory the issue would ‘largely’ be one of fact and permit the admission of evidence not admissible on the construction theory, where the issue is one of law. However, this is difficult to maintain because the foundation of the contract can only be established by construction. Similarly, Lord Reid’s contrast of the implied term theory and the construction theory, from the point of view of the difficulty in formulating the implied term, does not arise if the implied term theory predicates a term implied in law on the basis of construction.240
1.
[1956] AC 696 at 729 (adopted Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337; 41 ALR 367).
2.
See Qantas Airways Ltd v Christie (1998) 193 CLR 280 at 317; 152 ALR 365 at 393. The concept may also operate if a series of events combine to make performance radically different. See, eg Pioneer Shipping Ltd v BTP Tioxide Ltd [1982] AC 724 at 738, 744.
3.
See [33-01].
4.
Metropolitan Water Board v Dick Kerr & Co Ltd [1917] 2 KB 1 at 30 (affirmed [1918] AC 119).
5.
British Movietonews Ltd v London and District Cinemas Ltd [1952] AC 166 at 185.
6.
Hongkong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd [1962] 2 QB 26 at 66 per Diplock LJ.
7.
Horlock v Beal [1916] 1 AC 486 at 525.
8.
Taylor v Caldwell (1863) 3 B & S 826 at 833; 122 ER 309 at 312. See, eg Ockerby & Co Ltd v Watson (1918) 25 CLR 431; Re De Garis and Rowe’s Lease [1924] VLR 38.
9.
See [29-15].
10.
(1647) Aleyn 26 at 27; 82 ER 897. The court was prepared to adopt a more lenient view in cases where the duty was implied by law and the promisor had ‘no remedy over’. Although this type of distinction was referred to in later cases (eg Connor v Spence (1878) 4 VLR (L) 243 at 258) it is seldom applied today.
11.
See, eg Matthey v Curling [1922] 2 AC 180 at 235; Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 198.
12.
Joseph Constantine SS Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting Corp Ltd [1942] AC 154 at 184.
13.
Cricklewood Property and Investment Trust Ltd v Leighton’s Investment Trust Ltd [1945] AC 221 at 237; National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] AC 675 at 706. But see F C Shepherd & Co Ltd v Jerrom [1987] QB 301 at 321. See also Barry Nicholas, ‘Fault and Breach of Contract’ in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995, p 337. Cf A J Morris, ‘Practical Reasoning and Contract as Promise: Extending Contract-Based Criteria to Decide Excuse Cases’ [1997] CLJ 147.
14.
Metropolitan Water Board v Dick Kerr & Co Ltd [1918] AC 119; Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337.
15.
Krell v Henry [1903] 2 KB 740.
16.
See, eg Simmons Ltd v Hay (1964) 81 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 358.
17.
See, eg Comptoir d’Achat et de Vente du Boerenbond Belge SA v Luis de Ridder Limitada (The Julia) [1949] AC 293.
18.
See, eg Jackson v Union Marine Insurance Co Ltd (1874) LR 10 CP 125; Bank Line Ltd v Arthur Capel & Co [1919] AC 435.
19.
Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd v James B Fraser & Co Ltd [1944] AC 265.
20.
Re The Unley Democratic Association [1936] SASR 473.
21.
Cricklewood Property and Investment Trust Ltd v Leighton’s Investment Trust Ltd [1945] AC 221 at 235, 241; National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] AC 675 at 701, 712.
22.
See [33-31]-[33-37].
23.
Tsakiroglou & Co Ltd v Noblee Thorl GmbH [1962] AC 93. Cf Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 222-3.
24.
See [12-01].
25.
National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] AC 675 at 717.
26.
Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd v James B Fraser & Co Ltd [1944] AC 265 at 276. See also Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati [1957] 2 QB 401 at 435; FC Shepherd & Co Ltd v Jerrom [1987] QB 301 at 316.
27.
See, eg Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC [1956] AC 696 at 735.
28.
See [33-25].
29.
See Pioneer Shipping Ltd v BTP Tioxide Ltd [1982] AC 724; Kodros Shipping Corp of Monrovia v Empresa Cubana de Fletes (The Evia (No 2)) [1983] 1 AC 736. See also F C Shepherd & Co Ltd v Jerrom [1987] QB 301 (industrial tribunal’s error in interpreting rules governing a contract of employment).
30.
Tsakiroglou & Co Ltd v Noblee Thorl GmbH [1962] AC 93 at 124.
31.
[1982] AC 724 at 738. See also Simmons Ltd v Hay (1964) 81 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 358 at 361.
32.
[1944] AC 265 at 274-5.
33.
See generally [12-05]-[12-12].
34.
See further [33-40]-[33-42].
35.
F A Tamplin SS Co Ltd v Anglo-Mexican Petroleum Products Co Ltd [1916] 2 AC 397 at 403.
36.
See F A Tamplin SS Co Ltd v Anglo-Mexican Petroleum Products Co Ltd [1916] 2 AC 397 at 403; Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 222 and generally [12-13]-[12-15].
37.
Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337.
38.
Krell v Henry [1903] 2 KB 740 at 749.
39.
See City of Subiaco v Heytesbury Properties Pty Ltd (2001) 24 WAR 146 at 164-5.
40.
Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 184; National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] AC 675 at 706. For the position in cases of delay see [33-26].
41.
Hirji Mulji v Cheong Yue SS Co Ltd [1926] AC 497 at 509. See also City of Subiaco v Heytesbury Properties Pty Ltd (2001) 24 WAR 146 at 165.
42.
[1983] 1 AC 736 at 768.
43.
See Pioneer Shipping Ltd v BTP Tioxide Ltd [1982] AC 724 at 752.
44.
Horlock v Beal [1916] 1 AC 486 at 492 per Earl Loreburn.
45.
(1863) 3 B & S 826; 122 ER 309.
46.
[1891] 1 QB 544. Contrast Reilly v R [1934] AC 176 (abolition of statutory office).
47.
See Goldsbrough Mort & Co Ltd v Carter (1914) 19 CLR 429 at 437-8, 443-4, 446-9.
48.
See ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 12; NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 12; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 12; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 10; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 7; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 12; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 12; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 7.
49.
[1926] AC 497.
50.
Cf Austin v Sheldon [1974] 2 NSWLR 661 (see [33-33]).
51.
See also [33-25]-[33-27].
52.
[1916] 2 AC 397.
53.
See further [33-43]-[33-48].
54.
Gelling v Crespin (1917) 23 CLR 443. See also J Lauritzen AS v Wijsmuller BV (The Super Servant Two) [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 1 (see [33-43]); CTI Group Inc v Transclear SA (The Mary Nour) [2008] Bus LR 1729 at 1739; [2008] EWCA Civ 856 at [23]. Cf Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati [1957] 2 QB 401 (see [30-43]]).
55.
Cf Howell v Coupland (1876) 1 QBD 258. Contrast Sharp v Batt (1930) 25 Tas LR 33 (source not identified).
56.
Taylor v Caldwell (1863) 3 B & S 826 at 835-7; 122 ER 309 at 313. Cf Cutter v Powell (1795) 6 TR 320; 101 ER 573 (see [28-24]). See also Lobb v Vasey Housing Auxiliary (War Widows Guild) [1963] VR 239 (agreement for lease or licence); Groser v Equity Trustees Ltd (2008) 19 VR 598 at 609; [2008] VSC 163 at [43] (death frustrated settlement the object of which was to provide for maintenance and support).
57.
Jackson v Union Marine Insurance Co Ltd (1874) LR 10 CP 125 at 145.
58.
(1964) 81 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 358. See also Howitt-Steven v Unisuper Ltd (2002) 193 ALR 207 at 249.
59.
See Robinson v Davison (1871) LR 6 Ex 269.
60.
[1916] 1 AC 486. See also Whim Well Copper Mines Ltd v Pratt (1910) 12 WALR 166.
61.
Finch v Sayers [1976] 2 NSWLR 540 at 558. But cf Notcutt v Universal Equipment Co (London) Ltd [1986] 1 WLR 641 (see John McMullen (1986) 49 MLR 785; G J McCarry (1987) 61 ALJ 35; David Howarth [1987] CLJ 47).
62.
See further [34-05] (force majeure clauses).
63.
(1913) 13 SR (NSW) 83.
64.
See also Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337.
65.
[1962] AC 93.
66.
[1964] 2 QB 226. See also Scottish Halls Ltd v The Minister (1915) 15 SR (NSW) 81 at 89-90.
67.
(1982) 149 CLR 337. See Jane Swanton, ‘Discharge of Contracts by Frustration: Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales’ (1983) 57 ALJ 201. See also Scottish Halls Ltd v The Minister (1915) 15 SR (NSW) 81 (resumption of land). Contrast Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC [1956] AC 696 (labour shortage).
68.
The case was remitted to the arbitrator for his decision on the issue.
69.
[1903] 2 KB 740.
70.
[1903] 2 KB 740 at 750 per Vaughan Williams LJ.
71.
Empresa Exportadora de Azucar v Industria Azucarera Nacional SA (The Playa Larga) [1983] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 171 at 187 per Ackner LJ.
72.
British Movietonews Ltd v London and District Cinemas Ltd [1952] AC 166 at 185.
73.
Krell v Henry [1903] 2 KB 740 at 748 per Vaughan Williams LJ.
74.
[1903] 2 KB 683.
75.
Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC [1956] AC 696 at 715.
76.
(1943) 67 CLR 169.
77.
See also Consolidated Neon (Phillips System) Pty Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1942) 42 SR (NSW) 152; Claude Neon Ltd v Hardie [1970] Qd R 93.
78.
Chapters 25 and Chapters 26.
79.
[1995] 1 WLR 1226 (see J W Carter and Gregory Tolhurst (1996) 10 JCL 264).
80.
See Bangladesh Export Import Co Ltd v Sucden Kerry SA [1995] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 1.
81.
Joseph Constantine SS Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting Corp Ltd [1942] AC 154 at 163.
82.
See Peel, Treitel’s The Law of Contract, 12th ed, 2007, §19-044 (‘the court has to take into account, not only the relative interests of the parties, but also the interests of the public in seeing that the law is observed’).
83.
See Consolidated Neon (Phillips System) Pty Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1942) 42 SR (NSW) 152 at 157.
84.
[1943] AC 32. See also [25-25].
85.
[1919] VLR 66.
86.
(1943) 67 CLR 169 (see [33-20]).
87.
[1944] AC 265.
88.
Metropolitan Water Board v Dick Kerr & Co Ltd [1918] AC 119 at 128; Ringstad v Gollin & Co Pty Ltd (1924) 35 CLR 303 at 315.
89.
See J E Stannard, ‘Frustrating Delay’ (1983) 46 MLR 738.
90.
(1874) LR 10 CP 125.
91.
See also Geipel v Smith (1872) LR 7 QB 404 at 411; Nobel’s Explosives Co v Jenkins & Co [1896] 2 QB 326 at 331.
92.
Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati [1957] 2 QB 401 at 434-5.
93.
Dahl v Nelson (1881) 6 App Cas 38 at 48; Universal Cargo Carriers Corp v Citati [1957] 2 QB 401 at 435.
94.
See [33-09].
95.
See National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] AC 675 at 706.
96.
Bank Line Ltd v Arthur Capel & Co [1919] AC 435 at 454.
97.
[1914] 3 KB 45 at 54.
98.
See, eg Watts Watts & Co Ltd v Mitsui & Co Ltd [1917] AC 227 at 246.
99.
See [33-27].
100. (1874) LR 10 CP 125 (see [33-25]). 101. [1914] 3 KB 45. 102. See Pioneer Shipping Ltd v BTP Tioxide Ltd [1982] AC 724 at 752, 754. 103. Cf Dahl v Nelson (1881) 6 App Cas 38 at 54. Subsequent events may assist in showing what the probabilities actually were. See Bank Line Ltd v Arthur Capel & Co [1919] AC 435 at 454; Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd v James B Fraser & Co Ltd [1944] AC 265 at 277-8. 104. Horlock v Beal [1916] 1 AC 486 at 507, 508. 105. See [33-23]. 106. Finelvet AG v Vinava Shipping Co Ltd [1983] 1 WLR 1469. 107. See, eg Cooper & Sons v Neilson & Maxwell Ltd [1919] VLR 66. 108. See, eg Kodros Shipping Corp of Monrovia v Empresa Cubana de Fletes (The Evia (No 2)) [1983] 1 AC 736. 109. See [33-23].
110. [1918] AC 119. 111. (1943) 67 CLR 169 (see [33-20]). 112. Cf Ringstad v Gollin & Co Pty Ltd (1924) 35 CLR 303. 113. [1952] AC 166. 114. [1949] AC 293. 115. [1919] AC 435. 116. See further [33-40]. 117. See [34-02]. 118. See [34-03]. 119. [1944] AC 265 (see [33-24]). 120. British Traders’ Insurance Co Ltd v Monson (1964) 111 CLR 86. See also Fletcher v Manton (1940) 64 CLR 37 (demolition pursuant to government order). But see Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW), s 66K (postponement of passing of risk to purchaser); Insurance Contracts Act 1984 (Cth), s 50 (sale of insured property). 121. (1979) 13 Build LR 81. 122. Meriton Apartments Pty Ltd v McLaurin & Tait (Developments) Pty Ltd (1976) 133 CLR 671. Cf Amalgamated Investment & Property Co Ltd v John Walker & Sons Ltd [1976] 3 All ER 509 (see [33-55]). See also E Johnson & Co (Barbados) Ltd v NSR Ltd [1997] AC 400 (see Peter Butt (1996) 70 ALJ 795). 123. [1974] 2 NSWLR 661. 124. Cf SJR Investment Co Pty Ltd v Housing Commission of Victoria [1971] VR 211. See also McMahon v Sydney County Council (1940) 40 SR (NSW) 427. Contrast Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 229. 125. Mahoney J took the view (see [1974] 2 NSWLR 661 at 667) that the issue of frustration was independent of the entitlement to compensation. 126. See J T Robertson, ‘Frustrated Leases: “No to Never — But Rarely if Ever”’ (1982) 60 Can B Rev 619. 127. [1981] AC 675 at 690, 694, 705, 715. 128. Cf Lobb v Vasey Housing Auxiliary (War Widows Guild) [1963] VR 239. 129. Dimond v Moore (1931) 45 CLR 159. 130. [1981] AC 675 (see Donald Robertson (1984) 9 Syd LR 674). 131. As expressed by the Court of Appeal in Leighton’s Investment Trust Ltd v Cricklewood Property and Investment Trust Ltd [1943] KB 493. On appeal, sub nom Cricklewood Property and Investment Trust Ltd v Leighton’s Investment Trust Ltd [1945] AC 221, although the decision was unanimously affirmed, the House was evenly divided on the issue whether the doctrine applies to leaseholds. 132. See, eg Krell v Henry [1903] 2 KB 740 (see [33-18]). 133. (1926) 26 SR (NSW) 183 at 187. 134. Sub nom Firth v Halloran (1926) 38 CLR 261. But see [30-36] (repudiation). 135. See Re The Equity Trustees Executor & Agency Co Ltd and Considine’s Contract [1932] VLR 137 at 144. 136. (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 228.
137. (1944) 68 CLR 261 at 302. Contrast Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 202. 138. Matthey v Curling [1922] 2 AC 180. 139. [1951] SASR 82 at 88. Contrast Re De Garis and Rowe’s Lease [1924] VLR 38, where an argument based on impossibility was rejected because the lease was construed as absolute in character. 140. (1958) 75 WN (NSW) 503. 141. (1958) 76 WN (NSW) 48 at 50. 142. (1982) 149 CLR 337. 143. [1981] AC 675. 144. See [30-36] and Progressive Mailing House Pty Ltd v Tabali Pty Ltd (1985) 157 CLR 17 esp at 28; 57 ALR 609, where reference is made to the English frustration cases. But note Brennan J’s statement ((1985) 157 CLR 17 at 41) that frustration and repudiation are distinct modes of termination to which different consequences attach. 145. [1981] AC 675. 146. [1945] AC 221 at 229. 147. [1981] AC 675 at 691, 700-1. 148. National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] AC 675 at 715 per Lord Roskill. 149. [1922] 2 AC 180. 150. Cricklewood Property and Investment Trust Ltd v Leighton’s Investment Trust Ltd [1945] AC 221 at 229. 151. [1981] AC 675 at 706. 152. See Shiell v Symons [1951] SASR 82 at 88; Robertson v Wilson (1958) 75 WN (NSW) 503. 153. Cf C G Hall, ‘Frustration and the Question of Foresight’ (1984) 4 Legal Studies 300. 154. [1956] AC 696 at 729 (see [33-01]). 155. See, eg Krell v Henry [1903] 2 KB 740 at 751; Paal Wilson & Co A/S v Partenreederei Hannah Blumenthal [1983] 1 AC 854 at 909. See also [33-39]. 156. [1956] AC 696 at 731. See also Silva v Tarval Pty Ltd (1986) 4 BPR 9101. 157. [1964] 2 QB 226 at 239. 158. See [33-40]. 159. See [33-39]. Cf Beaton v McDivitt (1987) 13 NSWLR 162 at 176-7. 160. (1964) 81 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 358 (see [33-15]). But cf Krell v Henry [1903] 2 KB 740 at 751-2. 161. [1939] 1 KB 132. See also Metropolitan Water Board v Dick Kerr & Co Ltd [1918] AC 119; Simmons Ltd v Hay (1964) 81 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 358. 162. Bank Line Ltd v Arthur Capel & Co [1919] AC 435 at 455-6. 163. Empresa Exportadora de Azucar v Industria Azucarera Nacional SA (The Playa Larga) [1983] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 171 at 188; Thors v Weekes (1989) 92 ALR 131 at 142; Ange v First East Auction Holdings Pty Ltd (2011) 284 ALR 638 at 652; [2011] VSCA 335 at [78]. Cf Re Comptoir Commercial Anversois and Power Son & Co [1920] 1 KB 868. 164. [1970] Qd R 93. 165. [1919] AC 435. See also Wong Lai Ying v Chinachem Investment Co Ltd (1979) 13 Build LR 81.
166. [1918] AC 119. See also Simmons Ltd v Hay (1964) 81 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 358. 167. See [33-23]. 168. [1918] AC 260. 169. Cf Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH v Vanden Avenne-Izegem PVBA [1978] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 109. 170. (1874) LR 10 CP 125 (see [33-25]). 171. See Jane Swanton, ‘The Concept of Self-Induced Frustration’ (1990) 2 JCL 206. 172. Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC [1956] AC 696 at 729 (see [33-01]). 173. [1935] AC 524. Contrast Re The Unley Democratic Association [1936] SASR 473. 174. [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 1, affirming [1989] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 148 (see Ewan McKendrick [1990] LMCLQ 153). 175. See generally on the impact of optional and alternative performances and obligations G H Treitel, ‘Alternatives and Frustration’ in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995, p 377. 176. Cricklewood Property and Investment Trust Ltd v Leighton’s Investment Trust Ltd [1945] AC 221 at 228. See, eg Brace v Calder [1895] 2 QB 253. 177. [1942] AC 154 at 166; see also at 192. 178. See also [1942] AC 154 at 204. 179. [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 1. 180. Cf Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 186. 181. Cf Denmark Productions Ltd v Boscobel Productions Ltd [1969] 1 QB 699. 182. [1983] 1 AC 854 at 920. 183. [1942] AC 154. See also Allied Mills Ltd v Gwydir Valley Oilseeds Pty Ltd [1978] 2 NSWLR 26 at 30. But cf F C Shepherd & Co Ltd v Jerrom [1987] QB 301 at 319. 184. See [29-03]. 185. This may be the explanation for Sharp v Batt (1930) 25 Tas LR 33, although a statement (at 44) is difficult to reconcile with the decision in the Constantine case. 186. In J Lauritzen AS v Wijsmuller BV (The Super Servant Two) [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 1 at 8 the statement of the principle refers simply to the person relying on frustration. 187. See [1942] AC 154 at 199, 200. 188. [1987] QB 301. 189. [1964] 2 QB 226 (see [33-17]). 190. See Monarch SS Co Ltd v A/B Karlshamns Oljefabriker [1949] AC 196. 191. For the assessment of damages see [34-07]. 192. Paal Wilson & Co A/S v Partenreederei Hannah Blumenthal [1983] 1 AC 854. 193. Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC [1956] AC 696 at 729 (see [33-01]). 194. Lord Radcliffe’s theory is sometimes referred to as the ‘change of obligation theory’. See National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] AC 675 at 702, although, in the same case (at 717) Lord Roskill appears to have drawn a distinction between them. 195. National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] AC 675 at 688, 717; Pioneer Shipping Ltd v BTP Tioxide Ltd [1982] AC 724 at 744, 751-2; Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority
of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337 at 357, 376, 408. See also Brisbane City Council v Group Projects Pty Ltd (1979) 145 CLR 143 at 159-163; 26 ALR 525 (see Julie Ward (1984) 9 Syd LR 461). 196. See, eg Taylor v Caldwell (1863) 3 B & S 826; 122 ER 309; Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1943) 67 CLR 169. 197. [1962] 2 QB 26 at 71. 198. See L E Trakman, ‘Frustrated Contracts and Legal Fictions’ (1983) 46 MLR 39. 199. See [11-09]. 200. Cf Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC [1956] AC 696 at 728. 201. [1944] AC 265 at 275. In Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 223 Williams J put it on the basis of the achievement of justice. It was on this ground that Lord Wright was prepared to accept the implied term theory in Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd [1943] AC 32 at 70, although he usually adopted (see [33-51]) the ‘just solution’ theory. See also Hirji Mulji v Cheong Yue SS Co Ltd [1926] AC 497 at 510. 202. See, eg [34-10]. 203. See Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC [1956] AC 696 at 720. Cf Ocean Tramp Tankers Corp v V/O Sovfracht (The Eugenia) [1964] 2 QB 226 at 238-9. 204. [1926] AC 497 at 510. 205. [1942] AC 154 at 184, 186. See also at 171 and Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd v James B Fraser & Co Ltd [1944] AC 265 at 275; Cricklewood Property and Investment Trust Ltd v Leighton’s Investment Trust Ltd [1945] AC 221 at 237. Cf Ocean Tramp Tankers Corp v V/O Sovfracht (The Eugenia) [1964] 2 QB 226 at 239. 206. Contrast F A Tamplin SS Co Ltd v Anglo-Mexican Petroleum Products Co Ltd [1916] 2 AC 397 at 404 (‘no court has an absolving power’). 207. (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 187-8. 208. [1981] AC 675 at 687. 209. See [33-03]. But see Kawasaki Steel Corp v Sardoil SpA (The Zuiho Maru) [1977] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 552 at 554 and cf J Lauritzen AS v Wijsmuller BV (The Super Servant Two) [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 1 at 8, 9. 210. British Movietonews Ltd v London and District Cinemas Ltd [1952] AC 166 at 185-6. 211. Notcutt v Universal Equipment Co (London) Ltd [1986] 1 WLR 641 at 647. 212. See W J Tatem Ltd v Gamboa [1939] 1 KB 132 at 137. 213. See National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] AC 675 at 687-8. 214. (1874) LR 10 CP 125 (see [33-25]). 215. [1903] 2 KB 740 (see [33-18]). See also Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 188. 216. See, eg F A Tamplin SS Co Ltd v Anglo-Mexican Petroleum Products Co Ltd [1916] 2 AC 397 at 404. 217. National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] AC 675 at 703. 218. (1863) 3 B & S 826; 122 ER 309 (see [33-12]). 219. See McElroy and Williams, Impossibility of Performance, 1941, p xxvii. 220. See, eg Bensaude v Thames and Mersey Marine Insurance Co Ltd [1897] AC 609; Horlock v Beal [1916] 1 AC 486 at 496. 221. See [34-11].
222. National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] AC 675 at 687. It may be more difficult to establish frustration where the contract is partially executed: Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 230. 223. See Sir Anthony Mason and S J Gageler, ‘The Contract’ in Finn, ed, Essays on Contract, 1987, pp 214; Andrew Kull, ‘Mistake, Frustration and the Windfall Principle of Contract Remedies’ (1991) 43 Hastings LJ 1; Andrew Phang, ‘Common Mistake and Frustration in Hong Kong’ [1991] LMCLQ 297; J C Smith, ‘Contracts — Mistake, Frustration and Implied Terms’ (1994) 110 LQR 400. 224. See generally Chapter 20. 225. See, eg Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337 at 360 per Mason J (‘closely related’); William Sindall Plc v Cambridgeshire County Council [1994] 1 WLR 1016 at 1039 per Evans LJ (‘same concept’). See also Great Peace Shipping Ltd v Tsavliris Salvage (International) Ltd [2003] QB 679 at 706. 226. [1919] AC 435 at 444-5. 227. [1942] AC 154 at 186. An example, in a case of partial discharge by frustration (see [34-04]) is Goldsbrough Mort & Co Ltd v Carter (1914) 19 CLR 429. 228. [1976] 3 All ER 509. 229. See [34-02]-[34-05]. 230. Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337 at 357. 231. [1942] AC 154 at 186; see also at 163 per Viscount Simon LC. 232. See, eg Dahl v Nelson (1881) 6 App Cas 38 at 59; Hirsch v The Zinc Corp Ltd (1917) 24 CLR 34 at 62; Joseph Constantine SS Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting Corp Ltd [1942] AC 154 at 159, 185. Cf Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC [1956] AC 696 at 720, 728. 233. F A Tamplin SS Co Ltd v Anglo-Mexican Petroleum Products Co Ltd [1916] 2 AC 397 at 404; Joseph Constantine SS Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting Corp Ltd [1942] AC 154 at 187. 234. National Carriers Ltd v Panalpina (Northern) Ltd [1981] AC 675 at 688. 235. See also Gelling v Crespin (1917) 23 CLR 443 at 454; Bank Line Ltd v Arthur Capel & Co [1919] AC 435 at 444; British Movietonews Ltd v London and District Cinemas Ltd [1952] AC 166 at 184. 236. [1981] AC 675 at 693. Cf Brisbane City Council v Group Projects Pty Ltd (1979) 145 CLR 143 at 161. 237. [1981] AC 675 at 702. 238. (1982) 149 CLR 337. The case is hardly conclusive against the implied term theory because the term sought to be implied would have dealt with more than the automatic discharge of the parties. 239. [1956] AC 696 at 719; cf at 728. 240. See Shell UK Ltd v Lostock Garage Ltd [1977] 1 All ER 481 at 487; E W Patterson, ‘Constructive Conditions in Contracts’ (1942) 42 Col LR 903 at 947–8.
[page 786]
Chapter 34
Consequences of Frustration [34-01] Introduction. The principles governing the consequences of termination are those of the common law, except in New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia1 where statutory provisions apply. However, the common law is still relevant even in these jurisdictions for three reasons. First, the statutes do not apply to all contracts. Second, the statutes can be excluded by the parties, and where not excluded may not cover all the consequences which result. Third, the legislation was intended to fill certain gaps in the common law and can best be understood in the light of these principles.
Common Law Principles Discharge of Parties [34-02] Discharge automatic. When frustration occurs it automatically discharges the parties from the obligation to perform their contractual duties.2 This is distinguishable from discharge following breach or repudiation which requires an election (by the promisee) to terminate the performance of the contract.3 Where frustration is self-induced4 the parties are not discharged, although the default of one of the parties may give rise to a right to terminate the performance of the contract, for example, because the default amounts to repudiation.5 If the fact that frustration is self-induced does give rise to a right to terminate, and the promisee terminates the contract, the consequences are governed by the principles applicable to termination for breach or repudiation.6
[page 787] The rule of automatic discharge has been criticised7 and gives rise to a slight difficulty in cases where frustration results from delay in performance. As was explained earlier,8 a party who reasonably infers that a frustrating delay would have occurred will usually be protected even though he or she has treated the contract as discharged prior to the frustrating delay and notwithstanding that, had the party waited, frustration would not in fact have occurred. In these cases it is arguably more appropriate to ask whether the party was justified in considering the contract as discharged than to inquire whether frustration automatically discharged the parties to the contract.9 Nevertheless, even in cases of delay, discharge does not depend on election by either of the parties.10 [34-03] Election and estoppel after frustration.11 Where the performance of a contract is terminated for breach or repudiation neither party is able, unilaterally, to reinstate the obligations of the parties.12 The position is similar where frustration occurs. One party, acting alone, cannot reinstate the obligations of the parties. Thus, it has been said that frustration operates for the ‘good or ill’13 of both parties. However, there is nothing to prevent the parties entering into a fresh contract.14 It has also been suggested that although a party may be estopped from setting up any of the rights which may flow from frustration, there can be no estoppel in relation to the discharge which takes place on the occurrence of the event.15 However, this distinction does not appear to be fully established by the authorities. For example, in Black-Clawson International Ltd v Papierwerke Waldhof-Aschaffenburg AG16 Mustill J considered that unequivocal acts recognising the ‘existence’ of the contract would have precluded reliance on frustration. In principle, there is no reason a party should not be estopped, by words or conduct, from relying on the doctrine, at least where no element of illegality or public policy is involved. [34-04] Partial discharge. Since frustration, when it operates, discharges the whole contract, a party cannot rely on frustration as a ground for partial discharge.17 There are, however, four exceptions to this rule. [page 788]
The first exception is more apparent than real. Where the contract was partially executed prior to frustration, discharge extends only to the executory part of the contract.18 Frustration never operates to rescind a contract.19 Second, assume that a contract relates to a specific subject matter, or subject matter to be obtained from a particular source. If the contract is frustrated because the subject matter substantially perishes, or the source substantially fails, the promisor is discharged to the extent that the subject matter has perished,20 or the source has failed,21 but not as to the balance.22 The third exception arises where an event occurs which does not frustrate the performance of the contract, but, instead, provides the promisor with an excuse for not performing. For example, where a lessee’s obligation to build under a building lease is affected by a government order prohibiting building, the lessee may be able to rely on the order as an excuse for not performing the obligation to build, but remain liable to pay the rent reserved by the lease.23 Since the excuse may be only temporary, and not actually amount to discharge,24 the defence is not based on the doctrine of frustration. Thus, the lessee is excused because of illegality in performance, not frustration. Fourth, partial frustration will occur if a part of the contract is so distinct from the remainder as to be, for all practical purposes, a separate contract. For example, a submission to arbitration may be frustrated even though the contract in which it is contained is not.25 However, the mere fact that a contract contains severable obligations need not imply that part of the contract can be discharged by frustration,26 although the parties can expressly provide for discharge.27 [34-05] Suspension of performance. Frustration does not merely suspend the parties’ obligations, it discharges them.28 However, an event [page 789] which does not frustrate the contract may effectively suspend the performance of an obligation. For example, supervening illegality, not amounting to frustration, may suspend performance.29 Similarly, an employer’s obligation to pay wages (and the employee’s duty to serve) may be suspended by the employee’s illness, not because the illness frustrates the contract but because the employee is not entitled to wages which have not been earned.30 The illness may also provide a situation where the employer’s (and employee’s) obligation is suspended for a
time and then discharged, because it is so prolonged as to frustrate the performance of the contract.31 The parties may expressly provide that the occurrence of a particular event is to suspend performance.32 Force majeure clauses are frequently used to suspend performance on the occurrence of an event for which neither party is responsible, such as an act of God affecting a building contract.33 Because of the express clause, it is not material to consider whether the event in question would operate to suspend performance under the common law.
Accrued Rights and Liabilities [34-06] Contract not rescinded. Frustration discharges the parties’ obligations in futuro (‘as to the future’), it does not rescind the contract ab initio (‘from the beginning’).34 Because there is no rescission it is misleading to speak of the contract as being ‘void’. The contract remains alive as the measure of the rights and liabilities of the parties. Accordingly, accrued rights and liabilities are not divested by frustration.35 In this respect, the consequences of frustration more closely resemble those applicable when a contract is discharged for breach or repudiation than those applicable where a contract is rescinded for misrepresentation.36 [page 790] [34-07] Recovery of damages. The occurrence of an event which frustrates a contract does not give rise to any right to claim damages. The fact that damages may be recoverable where ‘frustration’ is self-induced, because the default in question amounted to a breach of contract, does not constitute an exception to this rule, because self-induced frustration does not automatically discharge the parties’ obligations. However, if a cause of action in damages accrued prior to the frustrating event, this is not divested by frustration. There must, of course, be an accrued right. For example, if a seller delivers defective goods under an instalment goods contract which is subsequently frustrated, the buyer will possess an accrued right to claim damages which is not divested by frustration. But in some cases frustration will prevent the right accruing. For example, if, prior to the time for
performance, a promisor repudiates contractual obligations, but the promisee does not accept this as an anticipatory breach of contract, frustration of the contract will prevent the promisee claiming damages.37 Where a cause of action in damages exists at the time of frustration, the fact of frustration may be relevant to the assessment of damages, because it may decrease the plaintiff’s loss. Moreover, the fact that the contract has been discharged for breach or repudiation prior to the occurrence of the event which would have frustrated the contract does not necessarily prevent the court having regard to later events when assessing damages. Thus, if the evidence shows that the contract would have been frustrated the court may take this into account and, if appropriate, reduce the plaintiff’s damages.38 But even if frustration of the contract (or the fact that it would have been frustrated) indicates that the plaintiff has suffered no loss at all by reason of the defendant’s breach, the plaintiff retains a right to claim nominal damages. [34-08] Terms operating after frustration. The general rule is that once frustration has occurred the terms of the contract cease to operate and neither party may claim to enforce its terms.39 Accordingly, for a term to operate after frustration the parties must clearly have intended this to be the case.40 An obvious case is where the parties expressly provide for what is to happen in the event of frustration. However, in some cases it may be possible to infer such an intention. For example, it will usually be inferred that a term requiring the parties to submit a dispute under the contract to arbitration,41 or an employee’s promise not to divulge confidential information obtained in the course of employment, is intended to operate [page 791] after frustration. In all cases it is a question of construction whether the parties intended the term to operate. [34-09] Accrued liabilities. The principle stated above does not apply to a term stating a liability which accrued prior to frustration. For example, where a contract for the sale of goods is discharged by frustration after deliveries have been made under the contract, the seller will be entitled to payment in respect of the deliveries made, if payment was due prior to frustration, unless payment by the buyer to the seller has become illegal.42 And there is no reason, in principle,
why an accrued liability should not be enforced after frustration even if payment would have fallen due after the frustrating event.43 Where a contract is discharged for breach or repudiation, a liability which accrued due prior to termination is not enforceable unless it was unconditional in character. For example, if a vendor agrees to convey title to land but terminates the performance of the contract for breach or repudiation after the time for payment has passed, the vendor cannot recover the price of the land because the right is conditional on transfer of title. In such cases the purchaser is permitted to rely on the total failure of consideration, which would occur if the obligation to pay were enforced, as a defence to the vendor’s claim so as to avoid circuity of action.44 In Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd45 the House of Lords considered the same reasoning to be applicable in cases of frustration.
Restitution after frustration [34-10] No restitution for partial performance. At common law46 partial performance of the contract prior to frustration does not give rise to a restitutionary claim in respect of that performance, and so a plaintiff cannot recover, as on a quantum meruit, the reasonable value of such performance. For example, in Appleby v Myers47 the plaintiffs agreed to erect certain machinery at the defendant’s premises. After the work had been partially completed, the premises, together with the partially erected machinery, were destroyed by fire without default by either party. The Exchequer Chamber held that this frustrated the contract. However, the plaintiffs could not recover anything in respect of the work done. The contract provided for payment on completion of the work and the fact that the defendant had received some performance prior to frustration did not imply a right to restitution on a quantum meruit. This was said to be because the plaintiffs contracted to do ‘an entire work for a specific sum’.48 [page 792] Similarly, where an employment contract is frustrated prior to the completion of the period of employment in respect of which the employee would be entitled to
wages, under the common law the employee is not entitled to restitution for the work done.49 It might be thought that these cases are unjust, and that under the principle of unjust enrichment which now governs restitution50 reasonable remuneration should be recoverable. It is certainly true that the reasoning in the cases themselves is outmoded. However, the unjust enrichment principle requires proof of benefit and it is not clear that the defendant in Appleby v Myers did receive a benefit. The court took the view that the plaintiff had accepted the risk that part performance would not be paid for, and the benefit of that performance was received (as a matter of obligation) under the contract and on the assumption that the work would be completed. Moreover, whatever value was received, it was destroyed by the frustrating event. On the other hand, in Cutter v Powell51 the defendant did receive something of value, namely, the work which was done prior to the death of the seaman.52 The benefit of this was not affected by the seaman’s death, and it may well be that such a defendant should now be regarded as having received a benefit, to be paid for under the principle of unjust enrichment.53 If a party incurs expenses, for example, in preparing for performance, no claim in restitution is available in respect of the wasted expenditure, because the expenditure does not benefit the other party. Where benefits are conferred after frustration the plaintiff is more likely to be entitled to recover the reasonable value (or price) of the benefits conferred.54 Thus, the contractors in Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales55 were assumed to be entitled to recover in respect of the work done after the contract had been frustrated. And in Société Franco Tunisienne D’Armement v Sidermar SpA56 Pearson J held that quantum meruit was available to a carrier who was forced by the closure of the Suez Canal to take the longer voyage around the Cape. [34-11] Recovery of money paid. Where money is paid prior to the frustration of the contract, the right to recover restitution of the amount paid depends on the terms under which the money was paid and the effect of frustration. [page 793] The terms of the contract (express and implied) may indicate that, no matter what transpires, the money may be retained by the payee. On the other hand, payment may be made on terms that it is recoverable unless the payer is in
default under the contract. For example, a deposit payment made under a contract for the sale of land may be made on terms that it is to be repaid if the contract does not proceed to completion unless the purchaser defaults. If the contract is frustrated prior to completion, and the purchaser is not in default, the purchaser can recover the payment, either on the basis of the parties’ intention or by application of the unjust enrichment principle. The time and effect of frustration may be important. Frustration of the contract will have no impact at all on a payment made under the contract if it was earned prior to frustration. In Re Continental C & G Rubber Co Pty Ltd57 cl 22 of a contract for the construction and installation of machinery provided that payments were to be made at the rate of 90 per cent ‘on the value of the machinery in progress’, as certified by an engineer. Payments totalling £6000 (for which certificates were given) were made, but the contract was frustrated prior to delivery of the machinery. The High Court held that the payments could not be recovered. Isaacs and Rich JJ said58 cl 22 indicated that the contractors had earned the payment. An even clearer case is where the contract is severable. For example, if a contract for the sale of goods provides for delivery and payment by instalments, frustration after payment has been made for deliveries received does not impact on the payments and they cannot be recovered by the buyer. On the other hand, if the impact of frustration is to cause a total failure of consideration the payer will be entitled to restitution. This was established in Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd.59 The buyers of machinery to be manufactured by the suppliers made a payment on account of the purchase price at the time when the order for the machinery was placed. Although the contract was frustrated prior to delivery, the buyers’ action to recover the payment made failed before the English Court of Appeal60 which held61 that the right to recover the payment depended on rescission ab initio which, of course, had not occurred. But the House of Lords held62 that the buyers’ right to recover the money merely depended on whether the consideration for their payment had totally failed, not whether the contract had been rescinded. Because the payment was a conditional payment on account of the price of the machinery there was a total failure of consideration and restitution was ordered.63 [page 794]
There is an intermediate case: frustration may result in a failure of consideration which is merely partial. Although unsatisfactory, the law is (at present) clear that on a partial failure there is no restitution of payments made.64 For example, assume that A pays in advance for services to be rendered by B. Frustration of the contract after the services have been rendered in part results in only a partial failure of consideration. Therefore, A cannot recover any portion of the payment made. However, the fact that the payee has incurred expenses for the purpose of performing a contract does not prevent the failure of consideration being total. In other words, the restitutionary principle depends on proof that the payer has not obtained a benefit and it is irrelevant whether the payee has sustained a loss.65 Until recently it was not entirely clear that the principles stated in the Fibrosa case formed part of Australian law.66 However, in a footnote to his judgment in Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov)67 Mason CJ stated68 that Fibrosa ‘correctly reflects the law in Australia and, to the extent that it is inconsistent, should be preferred to the decision’ in Re Continental.
Under Statute69 [34-12] Defects of the common law. Four defects of the common law stand out. First, there is the restriction on the ability to recover money paid prior to frustration imposed by the requirement of a total failure of consideration. There is obvious injustice if a substantial sum has been paid and a relatively small benefit obtained by performance prior to frustration. Second, from the other party’s point of view, it will frequently be unjust for nothing to be recovered in respect of performance rendered (but not paid for) prior to frustration. Third, the inability to recover anything in respect of expenditure incurred prior to frustration, without regard to whether any performance was received prior to frustration, is unsatisfactory if the expenditure is entirely wasted. Fourth, the ability to enforce a cause of action which accrued due prior to frustration may be unsatisfactory because of the absence of adjustment mechanisms other than the total failure of consideration concept. [page 795]
The statutes70 enacted in Victoria, New South Wales and South Australia attempt to overcome the shortcomings of the common law. It will be seen that the solutions offered by the statutes differ markedly.
New South Wales [34-13] Position governed by Frustrated Contracts Act 1978. In New South Wales the consequences of frustration are regulated by the Frustrated Contracts Act 1978 (NSW),71 the substantive sections of which came into force on 1 May 1979. For the purposes of the Act,72 frustration includes the ‘avoidance’ of an agreement under s 12 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW). The Act attempts to provide a scheme for the apportionment of loss caused by frustration. It is an attempt to state a scheme which can be applied by the parties without resorting to litigation. Generally, the Act applies only to things done, or required by the contract to be done, before frustration. However, s 5(4) qualifies this in relation to anything ‘which is done or suffered under the contract’ after the time of frustration by a party before the party ‘knows or ought to know’ of the circumstances — whether of law or fact — giving rise to frustration. Such conduct must be treated as having ‘effect as if done or suffered before the time of frustration’. The Act binds the Crown: s 4. [34-14] Contracts to which the Act does not apply. Certain contracts are excluded from the Act by s 6. Under s 6(1), the Act does not apply to: a contract made before 1 May 1979; a charterparty which is not a time or demise charterparty; a contract (other than a charterparty) for the carriage of goods by sea; a contract of insurance; or any other contract ‘in so far as the parties thereto have agreed’ that the Act is not to apply. In addition, under s 6(2), the Act does not apply to a contract ‘embodied in or constituted by the memorandum or articles of association or rules or other instrument or agreement constituting, or regulating the affairs of’, certain enumerated bodies. These include companies and partnerships. However, the
circumstances alleged to give rise to frustration of the contract must ‘furnish a case for the winding up or dissolution of the body’. Finally, under s 6(3), where a contract which is severable into parts is partially frustrated, the Act does not apply to the part (or parts) not frustrated. [page 796] [34-15] Extent of discharge under the Act. At common law73 discharge by frustration generally does not therefore affect, directly at least, any promise due for performance prior to frustration. However, under s 7 of the Act a promise due for performance prior to frustration which was not performed before the time of frustration is discharged, except to the extent necessary to support a claim for damages. For example, if A promises to build machinery for B, but the contract is frustrated, A’s promise is discharged by frustration even if it fell due for performance prior to frustration, except to the extent that B may claim damages for A’s breach of contract. However, this will not apply if the promise would not have been discharged had it fallen due for performance after the time of frustration. For example, an employee’s promise not to divulge the secrets of the employer may not be discharged, even though the contract is frustrated, if, no matter at what time the promise was due to be performed, it would not be discharged by frustration at common law. [34-16] Damages after frustration.Section 8 of the Act provides that, when damages are assessed in respect of a liability which accrued prior to frustration, regard must be had to the fact that the contract has been frustrated. The section says nothing about the assessment of damages where a contract which would have been frustrated was discharged by termination for breach or repudiation prior to the occurrence of the event which would have frustrated the contract.74 [34-17] Full performance prior to frustration. Section 10 deals with the situation where full performance, which does not involve (either wholly or in part) the payment of money,75 is received prior to the time of frustration.76 The position of a plaintiff who fully performed prior to frustration could be solved in at least three ways. First, the defendant could be required to pay the agreed sum, or, if the defendant’s performance was to take some other form, the money value of the defendant’s performance. Second, the defendant could be held liable to pay the market value of the plaintiff’s performance. Third, the plaintiff might be entitled to recover the market value of the performance which the defendant
promised to render. In fact, s 10 provides for payment, to the party who performed, of an amount equal to the ‘value of the agreed return for the performance’. The ‘agreed return’ of one party’s performance is defined by s 5(1) of the Act as the performance by the other party ‘contemplated by the contract as consideration for the firstmentioned performance’. Although the position is far from clear, it appears that s 10 adopts the third solution. This is the logical implication of the reference to the ‘value of the agreed return for [page 797] performance’, rather than the ‘value of the performance rendered by the defendant’ (first solution), or the ‘value of the performance received by the plaintiff’ (second solution). This creates two problems. To begin with, it is difficult to see how a promise to pay money can have any value other than the sum promised, so that it would have been simpler to adopt the first solution. Given that s 10 applies only where the plaintiff’s performance did not involve the payment of money, the ‘agreed return’ will almost invariably take a monetary form. It was perhaps thought that such an approach would have been inconsistent with the idea that the parties are discharged from their contractual obligations. The second problem is that the defendant bears the whole loss caused by frustration, since there is no indication that regard may be had to any diminution in value caused by the event which frustrates the contract. Although the justice of this is not readily apparent, it seems that the drafters considered that the only diminution to be taken into account on frustration is the fact of discharge itself.77 Since discharge does not impact on the value of what was promised by the defendant, no diminution is permitted. [34-18] Partial performance prior to frustration.Section 11 of the Act deals with partial performance, that is, situations in which part, but not all, of the performance to be given by one party was received by the other before frustration. It is therefore, like s 10, concerned with frustration occurring after the receipt by the other party of a non-monetary performance. Under s 11(2) the amount payable by the party who received performance depends on whether what the Act terms the ‘attributable cost’ of performance is
greater than the ‘attributable value’ of performance. If attributable cost does exceed attributable value, the performing party is entitled to an amount equal to the sum of attributable value and one-half of the amount by which attributable cost exceeds attributable value. In all other cases the performing party is entitled to receive the attributable value of performance. Thus, in symbolic terms: P is entitled to av, unless— ac > av in which case P receives av +
(ac − av) 2
where: P is the performing party ac means attributable cost av means attributable value The concepts of attributable cost and attributable value are defined by s 11(1). It is an indication of the complexity of the section that four more concepts, namely, ‘incidental gain’, ‘lost value’, ‘proportionate allowance’ and ‘reasonable cost’ have to be defined in order to define the two basic concepts. ‘Lost value’ refers to the impact of discharge of the contract on the value of the performance received, rather than the physical effect of the [page 798] event giving rise to frustration on the benefits conferred. It therefore appears that Appleby v Myers78 would be decided differently under the Act. However, at this stage the lawyer passes the file on to an accountant.79 [34-19] Recovery of money paid. Section 12, dealing with the return of money paid prior to frustration, is thankfully more straightforward than s 11. The party who received the money must pay an equal sum to the party who made the payment. However, this is subject to an important refinement. The money must have been paid ‘as, or as part of, an agreed return for performance of the contract by another party’. Recalling the definition in s 5(1),80 there will be no obligation to repay if the money was not paid as consideration for performance. Therefore,
a payment made in consideration of performance will be recoverable. For example, if A agrees to design, build and deliver machinery to B for $100,000, and B pays A $50,000 in anticipation of installation by A, but the contract is frustrated after partial installation, B is entitled to receive $50,000. On the other hand, if a buyer of goods agrees to pay on a day certain irrespective of delivery,81 the buyer may be unable to recover the payment if the contract is subsequently frustrated, because the payment was not the agreed return for the seller’s performance. This seems an odd result. [34-20] Wasted expenditure. Expenditure prior to the frustration is not recoverable at common law even though the expenditure may be entirely wasted because of frustration. Section 13 of the Act is intended to provide a solution to this. Under s 13(1), a party who suffers detriment ‘by reasonably paying money, doing work or doing or suffering any other act or thing for the purpose of giving performance under the contract’ is entitled to receive ‘an amount equal to onehalf of the amount that would be fair compensation for the detriment suffered’. For example, if A agrees to design, build and deliver machinery to B for $100,000, and A spends $10,000 in doing the design and preliminary construction work for machinery not delivered, A would be entitled to receive $5000, assuming $10,000 to be ‘fair compensation’ for the work done. If, as in an earlier version of this example,82 B paid $50,000 in advance, B would be entitled to recover $45,000 ($50,000 — $5000). The manufacturer (A) may be able to salvage something from the partially completed machinery, and it might be thought that this is relevant to the assessment of the ‘fair compensation’. However, this is not the position. Instead, there is an express provision in s 13(2), which provides that where the performing party has, as a ‘consequence’ of doing or suffering the act or things that caused that party to suffer the detriment, ‘acquired or derived any property or improvement to property’, that party must pay to the other party ‘one-half of the value of the property or improvement so acquired or derived’. Thus, if we assume that the [page 799] partially completed machinery had a value of $2000, B would be entitled to receive $1000. The end result would be the receipt by A of a sum of $46,000. In effect, therefore, the net loss of $8000 is apportioned equally between the
parties. [34-21] Basis of recovery. Where money is payable as a result of the application of ss 9 to 13, it is recoverable as a debt in a court of competent jurisdiction: s 14. [34-22] Adjustment by court. In three situations the court may, by order, exclude a contract from the operation of ss 9 to 13, and substitute such adjustments ‘in money or otherwise’ as it considers proper (s 15(1)). The court must be satisfied that the ‘terms of the contract or the events which have occurred’ are such that, in relation to the contract, ss 9 to 13: are ‘manifestly inadequate or inappropriate’ cause ‘manifest injustice’ in their application; or would be ‘excessively difficult or expensive’ to apply. By virtue of s 15(2), the orders which a court may make under s 15(1) include orders for the payment of interest, and orders as to the time when money shall be paid.83 Having regard to the novelty of the concepts stated, for example, in s 11, and the likelihood that the parties will disagree on the sums payable after frustration, it may be that the Act will not achieve its intended function of allowing the parties to fix their respective entitlements after frustration without resorting to litigation. Section 15 will come into play in all but the most straightforward cases. It is difficult to believe that the Frustrated Contracts Act 1978 (NSW) is, in the majority of cases, an improvement on the common law.
Victoria84 [34-23] Introduction. In Victoria the consequences of frustration are regulated by Pt 3.2 of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic).85 The legislation is modelled on the Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943 (UK). The Act applies not only where a ‘contract has become impossible of performance or been otherwise frustrated’, but also to cases where a sale of goods contract has been ‘avoided’ under s 12 of the Goods Act 1958 (Vic).86 [page 800]
It has been suggested87 that the ‘fundamental principle’ underlying the legislation is ‘prevention of the unjust enrichment of either party to the contract at the other’s expense’. [34-24] Discharge under the Act. Section 3(1) of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) provides that the ‘time of discharge’ is the time at which the contract becomes impossible of performance, or is otherwise frustrated, or avoided by s 12 of the Goods Act 1958 (Vic). The discharging effect of frustration is acknowledged in s 35(1), by reference to the ‘further performance of the contract’. The discharging effect is extended a little by s 36(2), which provides that money payable prior to the ‘time of discharge’ ceases to be payable.88 Although it has been suggested that the effect of this is that non-monetary obligations are not discharged,89 because specific performance will not be ordered after frustration the better view is that such obligations are also discharged. Although s 36(2) does not expressly say that an accrued right to damages remains enforceable, it would seem that this is the case. Therefore, although the fact of breach does not prevent a party enforcing rights under the Act, it may have the effect of reducing the sum payable. [34-25] Recovery of money paid. Under s 36(1) of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic), all sums paid before the time of discharge are recoverable by the party who made the payment. This is subject to s 37, which operates ‘despite’ s 36 and applies also to cases where money was due to be paid, but was not paid, prior to discharge. Section 37 operates if the party to whom the money was paid (or payable) incurred expenses before the time of discharge ‘in, or for the purpose of, the performance of the contract’.90 The provision confers on the court a power to allow the party to whom the money was paid (or payable) to retain (or recover) all or part of the amount paid (or payable). Where no allowance for expenses is claimed, an award under s 36 is not subject to any deduction.91 Where an allowance is sought, the court must consider it ‘just’ to make the deduction, and have regard to all the circumstances of the case. The onus rests on the party to whom the money was paid (or payable) to establish that the expenses were in fact incurred in or for the purpose of performance.92 Moreover, the amount which can be retained (or recovered) is not to exceed the expenses incurred. If the expenses incurred exceeded the amount paid (or payable) the court cannot increase the liability of the defendant.
[page 801] [34-26] Expenses incurred.As explained above, the court may allow a party to retain (or recover) a just sum where expenses were incurred prior to the time of frustration if the contract stipulated that a sum would be paid prior to the time of frustration. Therefore, although there is no obligation to make an allowance,93 s 37 may result in a party, such as the suppliers in Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd94 retaining (or recovering) something to cover wasted expenditure. However, unlike the position in other jurisdictions, the court will have no jurisdiction to award a just sum in respect of wasted expenditure where: (1) the contract did not provide for pre-payment; (2) the contract provided for pre-payment but the time for payment had not arrived at the time of discharge; or (3) the contract provided for performance in a non-monetary form. This may be explained by the unjust enrichment perspective. There is no justification for allowing expenses to be claimed unless the other party is entitled to make a claim for restitution, or entitled to rely on discharge as a defence to a claim for payment of a sum of money which ought to have been paid prior to frustration. [34-27] Benefits obtained. Sections 38, 39 and 40 of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) deal with restitution in respect of benefits obtained by one party to the contract95 as a result of anything done by any other party to the contract ‘in, or for the purpose of, the performance of the contract’. Under s 38 the benefit must be a ‘valuable benefit’ (other than the payment of money to which s 36 or s 37 applies) and the benefit must have been obtained prior to frustration. The court may award such sum, not exceeding the ‘value’ of the benefit, as it considers just, having regard to all the circumstances of the case. In particular the court must have regard: (1) to the amount of any expenses incurred before the time of discharge by the benefited party, including any sums paid or payable to any other party in pursuance of the contract and retained or recoverable under s 36 or s 37; and (2) to the effect in relation to the benefit of the circumstances giving rise to
the frustration or avoidance of the contract. There are ‘two distinct stages’96 in the assessment of an award under s 38, namely: identification and valuation of the benefit; and calculation of the just sum. Where the plaintiff’s performance required work to be done or services to be provided, it seems that it is the end product of the work or services that must be identified,97 and valued at the moment before [page 802] frustration. The court must then decide what, in the circumstances of the case, it is just to award to the plaintiff. What is the effect of requiring the court to have regard to two matters in particular? The first is relatively straightforward: its purpose is to prevent double counting of expenses incurred.98 The requirement that regard be had to the circumstances giving rise to frustration or avoidance is more difficult. Consider, for example, a contract for the construction of machinery on the defendant’s premises which is frustrated by the destruction of the premises after the machinery has been partially constructed. Assume that the contract price was $5000 and that a sum of $1000 was paid to the contractor prior to frustration. Assume also that the contractor incurred expenses of $3000 in designing and building the machinery and that its value, the moment before frustration, was $1500. The maximum which the court may award under s 38 is the value of the benefit,99 that is, $1500. However, the court must take three other considerations into account:100 the expenses incurred by the contractor; any sum retained under s 37 or s 38; and the effect of the circumstances which gave rise to frustration. The contractor’s expenses were $3000 and, for the purposes of argument it can be assumed that having regard to these expenses, it would be just to allow the contractor to retain the $1000 pre-payment. That assumption reduces the amount which may be recovered under s 38 to $500. Whether the court should award the contractor this sum, or any part of it, depends mainly on how the court interprets the requirement that it have regard to the effect of the circumstances which frustrated the contract.
One view is that because destruction of the defendant’s premises destroyed the machinery there is no benefit at all if regard is had to the circumstances.101 The alternative view is that the benefit must be valued prior to the event, and the event taken into account when assessing the sum which the court in its discretion considers just.102 Although the alternative view might appear more logical, it amounts to a reversal of Appleby v Myers,103 and is therefore controversial. If the Act said that account must be taken of the discharge of the contract,104 the alternative view would be correct. But because the reference is to the ‘circumstances giving rise to the frustration’, the first view is to be preferred, at least as a matter of statutory interpretation. [page 803] [34-28] Overhead expenses and work done. Section 39 of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) provides that in estimating for the purposes of Pt 3.2, the amount of any expenses incurred by any party to the contract, the court may include ‘such sum as appears to be reasonable in respect of overhead expenses’ and any ‘work or services performed personally’ by the party. This is without prejudice to the generality of the earlier provisions. [34-29] Money payable under insurance contract. Under s 40 of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) the court must not take into account, when considering whether a sum is to be recovered or retained by a party, any sums which have, by reason of the circumstances giving rise to the frustration or avoidance of the contract, become payable to that party under any contract of insurance. The provision is subject to a qualification that the court may have regard to an obligation to insure imposed by an express term of the contract or under any enactment. It is perhaps significant that s 40 does not refer to money payable under a contract for insurance to a party who obtains a valuable benefit before the time of discharge. Thus, when considering the effect of frustration on the benefit, it may be that the court can have regard to the fact that frustration gives rise to a claim under an insurance contract. [34-30] Benefits conferred on third parties. Section 38(4) of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) extends the operation of s 38 to the following situation. Assume that A is subject to obligations under a contract in consideration of the performance of a promise by B and undertakes to confer
benefits on a third party (C). Section 38(4) provides that, irrespective of whether C is a party to the contract, the court may treat any benefit conferred on C as a benefit obtained by A. The court must consider whether the circumstances of the case are such that it is just so to treat the benefit. [34-31] Terms dealing with frustration. Section 41 of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) provides that where a term, on its ‘true construction’ is intended to have effect in the circumstances which have occurred, the court must apply the provision, and only give effect to Div 2 of Pt 3.2 to such extent as is consistent with the provision.105 This applies irrespective of whether the circumstances which have occurred operate, or would but for the contractual provision operate, to frustrate or avoid the contract. It also applies if the contractual provision was intended to have effect irrespective of the circumstances which have in fact arisen. [34-32] Contracts to which the Act applies. Part 3.2 of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) applies to contracts whenever made, in respect of which the time of discharge was on or after 29 September 1959: s 35(2). Part 3.2 applies to the Crown.106 [page 804] [34-33] Contracts to which the Act does not apply. Section 35(3) of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) excludes from the operation of the Act: a charterparty, other than a time charterparty or one by way of demise; a contract for the carriage of goods by sea other than a charterparty; and a contract of insurance. In addition, Pt 3.2 may be expressly excluded by the parties’ contract. [34-34] Contracts severable into parts. Where it appears to the court that a part of a contract to which Pt 3.2 of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) applies can be severed from the remainder, s 42 may apply and require the severable parts to be treated as separate contracts. For s 42 to operate, the portion of the contract which is severed must have been ‘wholly performed’ before the time of discharge, or wholly performed
except for the payment of sums ‘which are or can be ascertained under the contract’. The court is then required to treat the part which has been performed as not subject to the Act, and to apply the Act only to the severed part. [34-35] Basis of recovery. Section 43 of the Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic) provides that all actions to recover money payable under Pt 3.2 are deemed to be ‘founded on simple contract’.107
South Australia108 [34-36] Position governed by Frustrated Contracts Act 1988. In South Australia the consequences of frustration are regulated by the Frustrated Contracts Act 1988 (SA). The Act came into force on April Fools’ Day 1988, a not inappropriate date for any legislation dealing with the consequences of frustration. Section 7(1) provides for an ‘adjustment between the parties so that no party is unfairly advantaged or disadvantaged in consequence of the frustration’. The Act sets out to achieve, broadly, the same goal as that underlying the New South Wales Act, namely, restitution of benefits plus an element of apportionment of net loss suffered.109 [34-37] Application of the Act. The Act applies to contracts avoided under s 7 of the Sale of Goods Act 1895 (SA) (s 3(1)), and binds the Crown (s 4(3)). [page 805] However, the Act may also be excluded by a term of the contract (s 4(1)(b)) and certain contracts are excluded from the operation of the Act by s 4(2). The main exclusions are: contracts made before the commencement of the Act; charterparties, other than time charterparties or charterparties by way of demise; any other contracts for the carriage of goods by sea; and insurance contracts. [34-38] Extent of discharge. Sections 5 and 6 regulate the extent and effect of
discharge. In providing that a contract is not wholly frustrated by the frustration of a particular part of the contract if that part is severable from the remainder of the contract,110 s 5 appears to do no more than restate the common law position.111 Under s 6(1), frustration has the effect of discharging all obligations that remain unperformed, whether or not performance had fallen due. However, s 6(2) exempts any ‘obligation that is, according to the proper construction of the contract, to survive frustration’. This ensures that obligations intended to operate after frustration remain enforceable.112 Section 6(2) also states that an action for damages may be maintained in respect of loss suffered as a result of any breach prior to frustration. However, it requires assessment of damages to take account not only of the fact that frustration has occurred, but also of any adjustment or right to an adjustment under the Act.113 [34-39] Adjustment under the Act. The adjustment is to be effected, according to s 7(2), in four steps.114 First, the aggregate value of contractual benefits received up to the date of frustration by each party115 is assessed as at the date of frustration. Second, the aggregate value of the contractual performance of each party to the contract is calculated up to the date of frustration. Third, the second sum is subtracted from the first sum, and the remainder notionally divided between the parties in equal shares. Fourth, an adjustment is made between the parties so that there is an equalisation of the contractual return of each at the figure attributed under the third step. Section 7(6) applies where a party to a contract purportedly performs a contractual obligation, or an act preparatory to performance, after frustration of the contract. Provided that the party did not know and could not reasonably be expected to have known that the contract had been [page 806] frustrated, the value of the performance (and of any consequent contractual benefits) is brought into account for the purposes of any adjustment as if it had occurred prior to frustration.
A broad discretion is conferred on the court by s 7(4), to make the necessary adjustment on a ‘more equitable basis’ than that of s 7(2). No guidance is given as to how this discretion is to be exercised, but presumably regard would be had to the basic aim of an adjustment laid down in s 7(1). That still leaves the object of the provision unclear. Is the intention that any adjustment conform to the basic premise of restitution plus apportionment of loss? Or are the details of the scheme merely one way of preventing unfair advantage or disadvantage, so that it would be quite acceptable for a court to achieve what it considers to be a more ‘equitable’ adjustment? The ‘integrated’ approach produces a return for each party after a single calculation. The Act does not deal separately with different types of performance, and it looks at the net positions of all parties collectively and then allocates a return, as opposed to looking at each party individually. These features make the Act considerably simpler than the New South Wales legislation. However, the provision for a residual discretion, when added to the ambiguities surrounding issues of valuation,116 serve to undermine any certainty that legal advisers might have in predicting the outcome of the Act’s application. [34-40] Valuation of benefits. In s 3(1) of the Act, ‘contractual benefit’ is defined as: (1) a benefit received by a party under the contract; (2) a benefit that is received by a party otherwise than under the contract but: (i)
at a cost to the party that is taken into account under the Act in calculating the value of the contractual performance of that party; or
(ii) in circumstances in which the receipt of the benefit constitutes part of the contractual performance of that party. Under s 7(2), benefits are to be assessed ‘as at the date of frustration’. But s 3(3) provides that the effect of frustration is to be taken into account in making a valuation. This must, however, be read together with s 3(4), which applies where an event occurring before, or resulting in the frustration of a contract, diminishes the value of a contractual benefit. Where there is such a diminution, a party is in certain circumstances deemed to have received a benefit equivalent to that diminution. The circumstances described in s 3(4) are: (1) where the event consists of, or arises from, a negligent act or omission for which that party is responsible; (2) where the risk of the event occurring is, by law or custom, to be borne by
that party or is a risk against which that party should, in [page 807] accordance with ordinary prudence or good business practice, have insured; or (3) where the event consists of, or arises from, an act or omission for which that party is responsible but which is ‘extraneous’ to the contract. The effect is to discount any loss in value caused by the frustrating event in any of the three situations, placing the burden on one party rather than apportioning it. Paragraph (1) appears to be largely misconceived. Since a negligent act or omission causing what would otherwise be ‘frustration’ will constitute ‘selfinduced frustration’, and prevent discharge under the doctrine of frustration,117 the paragraph can only apply to events occurring before frustration which do not contribute to the occurrence of the event. Paragraph (2) will rarely apply, since there will usually be no frustration if the risk is of a type to be borne by that party or is a risk against which that party should, in accordance with ordinary prudence or good business practice, have insured. It is difficult to know quite what to make of para (3). It seems intended to apply to an act or omission which contributes to the occurrence of the event which has frustrated the contract, but which does not constitute a breach of contract. Perhaps there is an idea that, although not debarred from relying on frustration, such a party should still be held responsible for the act or omission. This responsibility is expressed in terms of a notional benefit. If so, its effect is to restrict unduly the ‘lost value’ provision in s 3(3). By applying to ‘an event occurring before’ the frustration of a contract, s 3(4) also attempts to deal with the situation where a party who has initially derived a benefit from performance has lost all or part of the value of that benefit by the date of frustration. The effect is that the apportionment exercise is not distorted by losses being counted which have nothing to do with the transaction. The combined result is that a party will only be able to have a benefit calculated at a figure reduced from its original value where neither party has caused the loss, and neither would have been expected to bear the risk of the loss.118 [34-41] Valuation of performance. Just as the valuation of benefit provisions in
the Act are somewhat problematic, so also is the cost that each party has incurred in relation to performance. This is the other preliminary calculation necessary for an adjustment to be made under s 7. ‘Performance’ here includes anything done by way of preparation, as well as the actual fulfilment of an obligation: s 3(1).119 Section 3(2) sets out how performance is valued. First, the value of a monetary payment is the amount of the payment. [page 808] Second, if performance is valued by the contract, (or such a value can be deduced from the contract) that value applies. This is presumably intended to cover the situation where full or part performance has been rendered, and the value of the agreed counter-performance appears on the face of the contract. Allowing value to be deduced raises the possibility of pro-rating of the agreed return or contract price where partial performance is rendered. It is, however, far from easy to calculate the appropriate rateable proportion of the contract price in many instances, particularly when the precise basis for pro-rating is not specified. This explains why there is a third case. Third, in any other case, value is determined by first calculating the costs incurred by the party in carrying out, or preparatory to carrying out, contractual obligations.120 This figure is increased (or reduced) by the percentage profit (or loss) which the party in question would have made from full performance of the contract. This allows for purely preparatory work which results in no performance actually being rendered. But in other situations it is difficult to see how this provision can work alongside the second case. In what circumstances is it intended that pro-rating is not to be used under the second case? The general intent of s 3(2) is plainly to value performance not according to its actual cost, but according to what the contract price would have allowed for it, whether higher under a ‘good’ bargain or lower under a ‘bad’ one. Unfortunately, that intent is fatally flawed. In implementing the principle that the profit/loss component of the original bargain is to be respected in making the necessary adjustment, s 3(2) will, leaving aside the difficulties in making the necessary calculations, operate appropriately in the situation where one party makes a profit and the other a corresponding loss. In other words, there is an assumption that one’s good bargain is the other’s bad bargain. This may occur
where, for instance, one party agrees to pay the other more (or less) than the ‘market rate’ applicable to the type of performance in question. But many contracts envisage both parties making a profit; and correspondingly may, if fully performed, prove to be bad bargains for both. Section 3(2) has no means of allowing for these situations, because it looks solely at the strength of the performer’s bargain. Whichever formula is used, the performer’s actual cost is inflated to allow a profit component, which is then built into the calculation of the final aggregate return. But no account is taken of the other party’s profit expectation. Similarly, the performer may have made a bad bargain (anticipated expenditure exceeds the contract price) and this will effectively depreciate the cost figure, to the other’s benefit. Yet the latter may also have made a poor bargain, if the market for the benefit required has subsequently fallen. The only extent to which the Act will bring a non-performing party’s profit/loss into account will be where the benefit created by performance is still realisable. Frequently, however, the benefit is destroyed by the frustration or diminished to such an extent that only a slight residual value remains. In these circumstances the assessment of the performer’s costs under s 3(2) will dominate the calculation of the aggregate return and hence the adjustment between the parties. This scarcely seems satisfactory. [page 809] [34-42] Basis of recovery. Any action seeking an adjustment, or the exercise of the court’s consequential powers under the Act, may be commenced before a court as if it were an action under the contract that arose at the time of frustration: s 8. 1.
See [34-13]–[34-42].
2.
Hirji Mulji v Cheong Yue SS Co Ltd [1926] AC 497 at 509; Scanlan’s New Neon Ltd v Tooheys Ltd (1943) 67 CLR 169 at 203; J Lauritzen AS v Wijsmuller BV (The Super Servant Two) [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 1 at 8.
3.
See Denny Mott & Dickson Ltd v James B Fraser & Co Ltd [1944] AC 265 at 274 and [31-02].
4.
See [33-43]-[33-48].
5.
Bank Line Ltd v Arthur Capel & Co [1919] AC 435 at 452. In some cases of self-induced frustration it may be possible to infer that the parties have abandoned the contract. See André et Compagnie SA v Marine Transocean Ltd [1981] QB 694.
6.
See Chapter 32. If abandonment occurs, the consequences depend on the terms of the contract of
abandonment inferred from the parties’ conduct. See Paal Wilson & Co A/S v Partenreederei Hannah Blumenthal [1983] 1 AC 854 at 915. 7.
See McElroy and Williams, Impossibility of Performance, 1941, pp 221 et seq.
8.
See [33-26]-[33-27].
9.
Dahl v Nelson (1881) 6 App Cas 38 at 53; Bensaude v Thames and Mersey Marine Insurance Co Ltd [1897] AC 609 at 613. Cf Poussard v Spiers (1876) 1 QBD 410; Notcutt v Universal Equipment Co (London) Ltd [1986] 1 WLR 641 at 648.
10.
Bank Line Ltd v Arthur Capel & Co [1919] AC 435 at 459. But cf Finch v Sayers [1976] 2 NSWLR 540 at 547, 548.
11.
See Andrew Rogers, ‘Frustration and Estoppel’ in McKendrick, ed, Force Majeure and Frustration of Contract, 2nd ed, 1995, p 245.
12.
See [32-03].
13.
Joseph Constantine SS Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting Corp Ltd [1942] AC 154 at 171 per Viscount Maugham.
14.
Bank Line Ltd v Arthur Capel & Co [1919] AC 435 at 455.
15.
See BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 783 at 810, 811-12 (affirmed [1981] 1 WLR 232; [1983] 2 AC 352 but without reference to this point).
16.
[1981] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 446 at 457.
17.
Aurel Forras Pty Ltd v Graham Karp Developments Pty Ltd [1975] VR 202; Nelson v Kimberley Homes Pty Ltd (1988) 4 BCL 289 at 291.
18.
See, eg Hirsch v The Zinc Corp Ltd (1917) 24 CLR 34.
19.
See [34-06]. However, supervening illegality (see [33-21]) may sometimes have this effect.
20.
Goldsbrough Mort & Co Ltd v Carter (1914) 19 CLR 429.
21.
Howell v Coupland (1876) 1 QBD 258.
22.
H R and S Sainsbury Ltd v Street [1972] 1 WLR 834 (see J W A Thornely [1973] CLJ 15). In cases where more than one contract exists there may be an entitlement to pro rata performance; see A H Hudson, ‘Pro-rating in the English Law of Frustrated Contracts’ (1968) 31 MLR 535.
23.
See Cricklewood Property and Investment Trust Ltd v Leighton’s Investment Trust Ltd [1945] AC 221 at 244. Cf Gerraty v McGavin (1914) 18 CLR 152. Contrast Re De Garis and Rowe’s Lease [1924] VLR 38, where the lessee was not discharged from his building covenant because it was construed as absolute. The case seems a doubtful one.
24.
See further [34-05].
25.
Bremer Vulkan Schiffbau und Maschinenfabrik v South India Shipping Corp Ltd [1981] AC 909 at 980.
26.
Ertel Bieber & Co v Rio Tinto Co Ltd [1918] AC 260 at 270.
27.
See, eg Bremer Handelsgesellschaft mbH v Vanden Avenne-Izegem PVBA [1978] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 109.
28.
Cricklewood Property and Investment Trust Ltd v Leighton’s Investment Trust Ltd [1945] AC 221 at 232.
29.
Cricklewood Property and Investment Trust Ltd v Leighton’s Investment Trust Ltd [1945] AC 221 at 239-40; Libyan Arab Foreign Bank v Bankers Trust Co [1989] QB 728 at 772.
30.
Finch v Sayers [1976] 2 NSWLR 540.
31.
Carmichael v Colonial Sugar Refining Co Ltd (1944) 44 SR (NSW) 233 at 235-6. Cf Finch v Sayers [1976] 2 NSWLR 540 at 547.
32.
See, eg Tennants (Lancashire) Ltd v C S Wilson & Co Ltd [1917] AC 495. For the relevance of public policy issue see [33-41].
33.
See David Yates, ‘Drafting Force Majeure and Related Clauses’ (1991) 3 JCL 186; M P Furmston, ‘Drafting Force Majeure Clauses’ in McKendrick, ed, Force Majeure and Frustration of Contract, 2nd ed, 1995, p 57; Donald Robertson, ‘Force Majeure Clauses’ (2009) 25 JCL 62.
34.
Hirsch v The Zinc Corp Ltd (1917) 24 CLR 34 at 64; Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fair-bairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd [1943] AC 32; Bank of Boston Connecticut v European Grain and Shipping Ltd [1989] AC 1056 at 1108.
35.
See, eg Re Continental C & G Rubber Co Pty Ltd (1919) 27 CLR 194 at 201; Joseph Constantine SS Line Ltd v Imperial Smelting Corp Ltd [1942] AC 154 at 170; CT Bowring Reinsurance Ltd v Baxter (The M Vatman and M Ceyhan) [1987] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 416 at 424.
36.
Hirji Mulji v Cheong Yue SS Co Ltd [1926] AC 497 at 510. However, where frustration occurs through illegality, the right to sue in respect of accrued rights may be suspended. See Ertel Bieber & Co v Rio Tinto Co Ltd [1918] AC 260 at 269.
37.
Avery v Bowden (1856) 6 E & B 953; 119 ER 1119.
38.
Watts Watts & Co Ltd v Mitsui & Co Ltd [1917] AC 227. See also [36-17].
39.
See, eg Metropolitan Water Board v Dick Kerr & Co Ltd [1918] AC 119.
40.
BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 783 at 829 (affirmed [1981] 1 WLR 232; [1983] 2 AC 352).
41.
Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (1982) 149 CLR 337; State Rail Authority of New South Wales v Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd (1982) 150 CLR 29; 42 ALR 289; Paal Wilson & Co A/S v Partenreederei Hannah Blumenthal [1983] 1 AC 854 at 917.
42.
Hirsch v The Zinc Corp Ltd (1917) 24 CLR 34.
43.
See Westralian Farmers Ltd v Commonwealth Agricultural Service Engineers Ltd (1936) 54 CLR 361 (express provision for termination — see [37-26]). But see Re Continental C & G Rubber Co Pty Ltd (1919) 27 CLR 194.
44.
McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 477; and see [37-38].
45.
[1943] AC 32 at 53 (see [34-11]).
46.
See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1228-31.
47.
(1867) LR 2 CP 651.
48.
(1867) LR 2 CP 651 at 661.
49.
Cutter v Powell (1795) 6 TR 320; 101 ER 573; Horlock v Beal [1916] 1 AC 486.
50.
See [38-08].
51.
(1795) 6 TR 320; 101 ER 573 (see [28-24]).
52.
Cf Independent Grocers Co-operative Ltd v Noble Lowndes Superannuation Consultants Ltd (1993) 60 SASR 525.
53.
For discussion see Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 1231.
54.
On whether the right of recovery is restitutionary or contractual see Mason, Carter and Tolhurst,
Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 1232. 55.
(1982) 149 CLR 337 (see [33-17]). But see Davis Contractors Ltd v Fareham UDC [1956] AC 696 at 722-4.
56.
[1961] 2 QB 278 at 312-15 (overruled in Ocean Tramp Tankers Corp v V/O Sovfracht (The Eugenia) [1964] 2 QB 226 on the basis that the contract was not frustrated). Contrast Adelfamar SA v Silos E Mangimi Martini SpA (The Adelfa) [1988] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 466.
57.
(1919) 27 CLR 194.
58.
(1919) 27 CLR 194 at 204.
59.
[1943] AC 32 (see [33-23]).
60.
Sub nom Fibrosa Société Anonyme v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd [1942] 1 KB 12.
61.
Applying Chandler v Webster [1904] 1 KB 493.
62.
Overruling Chandler v Webster [1904] 1 KB 493.
63.
Similarly a buyer under a sale of goods contract may recover a pre-paid price if frustration prevents delivery, title to the goods not having been transferred to the buyers. See Comptoir d’Achat et de Vente du Boerenbond Belge SA v Luis de Ridder Limitada (The Julia) [1949] AC 293.
64.
Whincup v Hughes (1871) LR 6 CP 78; Re Palmdale Insurance Ltd [1982] VR 921 at 931; Bank of Boston Connecticut v European Grain and Shipping Ltd [1989] AC 1056 at 1108. Cf Roxborough v Rothmans of Pall Mall Australia Ltd (2001) 208 CLR 516; 185 ALR 335 (see [38-06]).
65.
See Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd [1943] AC 32 at 49–50, 54–5, 71–2 (cf at 76).
66.
But cf Westralian Farmers Ltd v Commonwealth Agricultural Service Engineers Ltd (1936) 54 CLR 361 at 371–2.
67.
Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (1993) 176 CLR 344; 111 ALR 289.
68.
(1993) 176 CLR 344 at 355 n 55. Brennan and Toohey JJ agreed. See also (1993) 176 CLR 344 at 375 (obligation to make restitution prima facie imposed where there has been a total failure of consideration).
69.
See Andrew Stewart and J W Carter, ‘Frustrated Contracts and Statutory Adjustment: The Case for a Reappraisal’ [1992] CLJ 66; Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1236–68.
70.
The legislation discussed [28-27]–[28-28] may also apply. For other relevant statutory provisions see Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 1235.
71.
See NSW Law Reform Commission, Report on Frustrated Contracts, LRC 25, 1976.
72.
Contrast Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943 (UK), s 2(5)(c).
73.
See [34-06].
74.
The common law (see [34-07]) applies, since a contract which has already been discharged cannot be frustrated and is therefore not within the ambit of the Act.
75.
Section 9 qualifies the general meaning in s 5(1). A reference to the ‘performing party’ is a reference to the party to the contract by whom the performance was given or intended to be given: s 5(2)(a).
76.
A reference to the ‘other party’ is a reference to the party ‘by whom performance is contemplated by the contract as consideration for the performance’. Under s 5(3) performance is deemed to be given and received if ‘received as contemplated by the contract’, whether received by a party or not.
77.
See [34-18].
78.
(1867) LR 2 CP 651 (see [34-10]).
79.
For analysis see Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1249–51.
80.
See [34-17].
81.
See [28-06].
82.
See [34-19].
83.
Additional jurisdiction to make orders is conferred by s 15(3); but s 15(7) states that ss 15(2) to (6) do not limit the generality of s 15(1).
84.
See Williams, The Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943, 1944; Ewan McKendrick, ‘Frustration, Restitution, and Loss Apportionment’ in Burrows, ed, Essays on the Law of Restitution, 1991, p 147.
85.
Replacing Pt 2C of the Fair Trading Act 1999 (Vic), which replaced the Frustrated Contracts Act 1959 (Vic).
86.
See Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic), s 35(1). This is a departure from the (UK) Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943, s 2(5)(c).
87.
See BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 783 at 799 per Robert Goff J. On appeal see [1981] 1 WLR 232 at 243; [1983] 2 AC 352.
88.
The provision is subject to s 37; see [34-25].
89.
See Peel, Treitel’s The Law of Contract, 12th ed, 2007, §19-105.
90.
See Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic), s 37.
91.
BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 783 at 800 (affirmed on other grounds [1981] 1 WLR 232; [1983] 2 AC 352).
92.
See Lobb v Vasey Housing Auxiliary (War Widows Guild) [1963] VR 239.
93.
See Gamerco SA v ICM/Fair Warning (Agency) Ltd [1995] 1 WLR 1226 where Garland J declined to make any allowance even though expenses were proved. See J W Carter and Gregory Tolhurst (1996) 10 JCL 264.
94.
[1943] AC 32 (see [34-11]).
95.
For the position with respect to benefits conferred on third parties see [34-30].
96.
BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 783 at 801 per Robert Goff J (affirmed [1981] 1 WLR 232; [1983] 2 AC 352).
97.
BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 783 at 801 (affirmed [1981] 1 WLR 232; [1983] 2 AC 352).
98.
See BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 783 at 808 (affirmed [1981] 1 WLR 232; [1983] 2 AC 352). See also Libyan Arab Foreign Bank v Bankers Trust Co [1989] QB 728 at 772.
99.
See BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 783 at 799 (affirmed [1981] 1 WLR 232; [1983] 2 AC 352).
100. See also [34-28], [34-29], [34-31]. 101. BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 783 at 801 (affirmed [1981] 1 WLR 232; [1983] 2 AC 352 but without reference to this point).
See Birks, An Introduction to the Law of Restitution, 1985, p 253; Peel, Treitel’s The Law of Contract, 102. 12th ed, 2007, §19-103. 103. (1867) LR 2 CP 651 (see [34-10]). 104. As in New South Wales; see [34-18]. 105. BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 783 at 806-7 (affirmed [1981] 1 WLR 232; [1983] 2 AC 352). 106. See Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic), s 4. 107. Contrast the position under Law Reform (Frustrated Contracts) Act 1943 (UK), s 1(2). 108. Andrew Stewart, Professor of Law at Adelaide University, kindly provided material from which the paragraphs below are derived. See also Andrew Stewart, ‘The South Australian Frustrated Contracts Act’ (1992) 5 JCL 220. 109. See further [34-39]. 110. Cf [34-14], [34-34]. 111. See [34-04]. 112. See [34-08]. 113. Cf Frustrated Contracts Act 1978 (NSW), s 8 (see [34-15]); Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic), s 41 (see [34-31]). 114. Expansive powers for the purpose of giving effect to this adjustment are conferred by s 7(5). 115. For the position of guarantors and persons who are jointly parties to a contract see ss 3(1) and 7(7) respectively. 116. See [34-40]–[34-42]. 117. See [33-43]–[33-48]. 118. Section 3(4) does not allow for the possibility of a rise in value of a benefit between the dates of receipt and frustration. 119. Where a party’s performance is referable to a number of separate contracts, the court may apportion the value of the performance between the contracts as it thinks just: s 4(3). 120. This includes a reasonable allowance for work done by the party.
[page 811]
PART X
Remedies
[page 813]
Chapter 35
General Principles of Contract Damages [35-01] Right to damages. Where a breach of contract occurs, whether by failure to perform or by anticipatory breach, the party not in breach (‘the plaintiff’) is entitled to recover damages. The right to claim damages is implied by law.1 One explanation of this is the general idea that whenever the law recognises or creates a primary obligation (or duty), a secondary obligation (or duty) is implied by law if the primary obligation is breached.2 In the present context, this secondary obligation is to pay damages for the breach of a primary contractual obligation. This secondary obligation will be implied in the absence of a term to the contrary. It is open to the parties to exclude, restrict or qualify the secondary obligation. However, such provisions are subject to the rules governing exclusion clauses.3 Similarly, although it is open to parties to quantify the secondary obligation in advance, provisions having this effect are subject to the rules on penalty clauses.4 More generally, any terms dealing with rights flowing from breach are affected by restrictions on the use of unjust or unconscionable contractual terms.5 Following a breach of contract a plaintiff is entitled to pursue a remedy, namely, damages. This establishes a contrast between a claim for damages and termination of a contract for breach or repudiation.6 Unlike claims for damages, which generally depend on the existence of a court order in favour of the plaintiff, a right of termination may be exercised, in most cases without going to court. From this technical perspective, if we describe termination as a ‘remedy’ it is a form of self-help remedy, whereas damages is a curial one. Although the concern is with claims in contract, there are situations (some of which are considered) where, because the breach amounts to
[page 814] tortious conduct, damages will be recoverable in tort. However, not every breach of contract amounts to a tort.7 [35-02] Right to terminate not required.Except in one situation, a plaintiff need not prove the exercise of a right to terminate the performance of a contract in order to claim damages for breach.8 The one exception is in cases of anticipatory breach, where termination is necessary to complete the plaintiff’s cause of action.9 For example, if prior to the time for delivery of goods, a seller repudiates the obligation to deliver, no breach occurs unless and until the buyer accepts the repudiation as an anticipatory breach. Of course, the buyer may wait until the time appointed for delivery, to see whether the seller delivers, in which case no right to damages accrues10 unless the seller fails to deliver.11 Therefore, if the seller does in fact deliver in accordance with the contract, or the contract is frustrated prior to the time for delivery, no right to damages will have accrued to the buyer.12
Some General Points Purpose of a Damages Award [35-03] The compensation principle. The fundamental principle governing the award of damages is that they are compensatory.13 In other words, the object of the award is to compensate the plaintiff rather than to penalise the defendant. This is true even if the breach is intentional or accompanied by an element of malice. The guiding principle is that the measure of damages is ‘not affected’14 by considerations such as the motive or intention of the defendant in breaching the contract. For example, in Addis v Gramophone Co Ltd15 the plaintiff claimed damages for wrongful dismissal and the jury awarded two sums: £600 and £340. The latter sum covered extra commission due to the plaintiff and there was evidence which justified the award of this amount. However, the [page 815]
former sum could only cover wages which the plaintiff had lost by reason of the dismissal, and as the plaintiff had been employed under a contract providing for the payment of £15 per week, there was no basis for the award of such a large sum, even allowing the plaintiff wages for the full period of notice to which he was entitled under the contract (six months). The House of Lords took the view that the jury must have included a sum to mark their disapproval of the manner of dismissal. Therefore, the jury’s verdict could not be sustained. It follows that exemplary or punitive damages — sometimes awarded in tort16 to punish a defendant — will not be awarded in contract.17 It also follows that, where a defendant makes a profit as a result of its breach of contract, the court has no jurisdiction to award the defendant’s profit to the plaintiff unless the plaintiff has sustained a corresponding loss. On the other hand, according to the decision of the House of Lords in Attorney-General v Blake,18 a court may in some cases make such an award as an account of profits. [35-04] Contract and tort.Damages in contract and tort generally have one thing in common: the court awards a sum which places the plaintiff in the position which would have been occupied had the wrong (breach of contract or tort) not occurred.19 However, if matters are looked at more closely, there will usually be a difference in the basis for assessment. In contract ‘where a party sustains a loss by reason of a breach of contract, he is, so far as money can do it, to be placed in the same situation, with respect to damages, as if the contract had been performed’.20 The object is thus to place the plaintiff in the position which would have been occupied had the defendant performed the obligation breached. On the other hand, in tort, placing the plaintiff in the position which would have been occupied but for the legal wrong usually involves restoring the plaintiff to his or her former position, for example, to the position occupied prior to the defendant’s fraudulent misrepresentation or negligence.21 At one time it seems to have been thought that the principles of law governing remoteness of damage are the same in tort and contract.22 However, in Koufos v C Czarnikow Ltd23 the House of Lords decided that the test of remoteness in contract is narrower than that applied in tort. [page 816] Nevertheless, in situations where a breach of contract also involves the commission of the tort of negligence, the plaintiff will not, it seems, be
prejudiced by the choice of cause of action and can normally recover under the wider concept of remoteness even if the action is framed in contract.24
Proof of Loss [35-05] Onus of proof. Where a plaintiff claims to have suffered loss or damage by reason of the defendant’s breach, the onus of proving the extent of loss or damage rests on the plaintiff.25 It must be established: that the loss or damage was caused by the defendant’s breach;26 and that the loss or damage was not too remote.27 [35-06] Nominal and substantial damages. A distinction is drawn between nominal damages and substantial damages. The former is awarded where, for one reason or another, the plaintiff proves no more than the defendant’s breach. For example, in Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd,28 a breach of condition was proved by Luna Park, but because no evidence of loss or damage occasioned by the breach was produced only a nominal sum (one shilling) was awarded under the cross-claim against Tramways.29 The case illustrates the point that a nominal sum is awarded to indicate the ‘infraction of a legal right’.30 On the other hand, a plaintiff who proves quantifiable loss or damage will not be restricted to a nominal sum and in this sense is entitled to recover a ‘substantial’ sum. However, until the loss or damage is actually quantified the plaintiff’s damages are ‘at large’ and the word ‘substantial’ merely signifies that more than a purely nominal sum will be awarded. [35-07] Identifying the loss.31 Generally speaking, in actions for breach of contract, the court will identify the plaintiff’s loss or damage by reference to the position of the plaintiff following the defendant’s breach. [page 817] Thus, the plaintiff must establish what has been lost, not what the defendant has saved or gained as a result of the breach.32 For example, if a buyer of goods establishes a breach by non-delivery, but the market price of goods of the type which the seller agreed to deliver has fallen, the buyer is, prima facie, limited to
the recovery of transaction costs because the buyer can go into the market and purchase equivalent goods for a lower price. The buyer does not displace the prima facie rule merely by establishing that the seller has sold goods to a third party at a higher price, even if this looks to enable the seller to profit from the breach of contract.33 There will, however, be cases where a benefit obtained by the defendant does in fact represent the plaintiff’s loss.34
Rule in Hadley v Baxendale [35-08] Statement of the rule. The basic rule governing the law of remoteness of damage in contract was stated by Alderson B in Hadley v Baxendale:35 Where two parties have made a contract which one of them has broken, the damages which the other party ought to receive in respect of such breach of contract should be such as may fairly and reasonably be considered either arising naturally, ie, according to the usual course of things, from such breach of contract itself, OR such as may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of both parties, at the time they made the contract, as the probable result of the breach of it.
Italics have been supplied to show the ‘rule in Hadley v Baxendale’. Although it might appear that there are two rules stated, separated by the capitalised ‘or’, the better view is that there is a single rule with two branches or limbs.36 [35-09] General and special damages.Damages under the first limb of the rule in Hadley v Baxendale37 are sometimes described as ‘general’ damages, and those awarded under the second limb ‘special’ damages. Accordingly, ‘general’ damages are those which the law presumes to flow ‘naturally’ from the breach. ‘Special’ damages are of an exceptional nature and only recoverable where the defendant had prior knowledge of the likelihood that the loss would be suffered.38 [page 818]
Bases of Assessment [35-10] Protection of expectation. It is common, when damages are awarded in contract cases, for assessment to protect the plaintiff’s expectation of receiving the defendant’s performance.39 Thus, the idea40 that the plaintiff is entitled to be
placed in the same situation as if the contract had been performed usually means that the plaintiff will recover an ‘expectation loss’.41 This does not, however, entail specific performance of the contract,42 even where the defendant has promised to pay money. For example, if V agrees to sell land to P for $100,000, and P fails to attend for settlement, V cannot recover by way of damages the price of the land.43 Assuming that V has validly terminated the performance of the contract, V is entitled to compensation for the loss of the bargain.44 If land prices have fallen, so that the land is worth, say $80,000, V is entitled to recover $20,000 on the basis that if P had performed V would have received $100,000 whereas V can now only obtain $80,000 on the market.45 The influence of the expectation approach is shown by the fact that in commonly recurring situations, such as non-acceptance and non-delivery of goods, a particular expectation will be presumed to apply.46 Thus, in cases of non-acceptance and non-delivery of goods the plaintiff is presumed to be entitled to the difference between market price and the contract price. Damages are not invariably awarded to protect a plaintiff’s expectation interest, and other bases for assessing the plaintiff’s loss may be considered. These bases protect a plaintiff’s reliance or restitution interest. However, in all situations the guiding principle is that the plaintiff is entitled to be placed in the same situation as if the contract had been performed.47 [35-11] Reliance damages. It is not at all uncommon for a plaintiff to expend money in the performance48 of a contract. If the defendant breaches the contract the plaintiff may find that the expenditure is wasted and may therefore seek to recover the wasted expenditure as damages.49 Usually, the claim for reliance damages does not form the main basis for an award.50 However, in McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission51 the plaintiff was awarded a contract for the salvage of an oil tanker ‘said to contain oil’ and ‘lying on Jourmaund Reef … approximately 100 miles north of Samarai’. The plaintiffs equipped a vessel and sent it from Sydney [page 819] to where the vessel should have been found — some distance from Port Moresby. It transpired that no such tanker existed and the High Court held the Commonwealth had breached an implied promise that the tanker existed.52 The
court also held that the appropriate way to compensate the plaintiffs was to award damages based on the money thrown away in searching for the tanker. As Dixon and Fullagar JJ said53 in their joint judgment: in the ‘waste of their considerable expenditure seems to lie the real and understandable grievance of the plaintiffs’. Accordingly, the court awarded the costs of setting up and sending out the salvage expedition. Expenses incurred must be ‘reasonable’. In McRae’s case the plaintiffs had in fact grossly exaggerated their claim. However, the court was able to arrive at a reasonable sum, on the basis of the evidence produced by the plaintiffs, and the Commonwealth could not prove that, had the tanker existed, the expenditure would have been wasted in any event. The main reason that the concept of reliance damages does not figure prominently in the cases is that generally a plaintiff is adequately compensated by damages awarded on an expectation basis, for loss of the bargain. In McRae’s case there was no basis for quantifying loss of bargain damages. Another situation in which the plaintiff may claim reliance damages is where no profit would have been made on the transaction. For example, if A agrees to sell goods to B on a constant market, the goods can be sold for the same price if the buyer refuses to accept the goods. In such a case A may claim any money thrown away in sending the goods to the buyer. On the other hand, if it is established that the plaintiff has in fact made a bad bargain, a claim to recover the full amount of any expenditure wasted will be rejected by the court on the ground that awarding the full amount would place the plaintiff in a better position than if the contract had been performed.54 In Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd55 Amann agreed to provide aerial surveillance of Australia’s northern coastline for three years. Amann incurred substantial expenditure in acquiring aircraft, and other costs and expenses. The Commonwealth repudiated the contract. Since, had it run for its full term, Amann’s income under the contract would not have exceeded the contract price, the Commonwealth contended that Amann was not entitled to recover its reliance loss as damages. However, although there was no contractual right of renewal, Amann could legitimately say that it would occupy a negotiating [page 820] position superior to that of its competitors when the contract expired. The High Court held that, because Amann had established that the Commonwealth’s breach deprived it of the chance56 of obtaining a renewal, the onus was on the
Commonwealth to prove that the contract was in fact an unprofitable one. Since this onus was not discharged, Amann recovered its reliance loss.57 Where the rule in Bain v Fothergill58 applies, the plaintiff is, by an arbitrary rule of the common law, restricted to reliance damages and cannot claim damages for loss of the bargain. [35-12] Restitution damages.Where a plaintiff confers benefits on the defendant, but is unable to claim the contract price because, for example, the defendant has prevented completion of performance,59 the plaintiff may recover damages assessed by reference to the value of the benefit obtained from the plaintiff’s partial performance. For example, if an employee is unlawfully dismissed after partial performance of an employment contract, damages equal to the value of the services provided may be awarded.60 In such cases the plaintiff’s loss simply represents the value of the benefit which the defendant obtained. Such claims are relatively rare under Australian law. Usually, damages in protection of the plaintiff’s restitution interest are simply an element of a general damages award, as where the claim includes money paid to the defendant which is effectively lost or thrown away because of the defendant’s breach.61 It is, moreover, difficult to draw a sharp distinction between restitution and reliance damages, because the former arises out of reliance on the contract. The difference is more marked where reliance does not involve the conferral of any benefit on the defendant but the plaintiff is able to recover money thrown away.62 In many cases where damages assessed to protect a restitution interest might be sought, the plaintiff may prefer to present the claim as one for restitution not damages. Thus, where a total failure of consideration occurs, for example, on the termination of a contract for the sale of land, money paid is recoverable by the purchaser as restitution and there is no need to claim damages. Such a claim invokes the principle of unjust enrichment.63 A more controversial question is whether a plaintiff can recover damages based on a benefit obtained by the defendant which does not represent a loss to the plaintiff.64 [page 821] [35-13] Combined claims. The method for assessing damages is, ultimately, a
matter for the court. Therefore, a plaintiff cannot claim an entitlement to elect between the bases of assessment considered above.65 Moreover, where it is appropriate to do so, a court may assess damages on more than one basis.66 However, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover an amount which exceeds the loss actually suffered. Accordingly, care must be taken to ensure both that damages are not awarded on mutually inconsistent bases, and that the plaintiff does not recover the same loss twice over. Two cases may be contrasted. In Cullinane v British ‘Rema’ Manufacturing Co Ltd67 the plaintiff purchased a clay pulverising and drying plant from the defendants at a price of £6578. The defendants guaranteed that the machinery would produce dry clay at a rate of six tons per hour, but the machine was found to be incapable of producing clay at that rate. Accordingly, the plaintiff claimed damages under five heads: heads A, B and C represented capital expenditure; head D covered interest on A, B and C; and head E represented lost profit. Therefore, the plaintiff was claiming not only his reliance loss (heads A, B and C) but also his expectation loss (head E). The court rejected the claim to recover both the whole of the plaintiff’s capital loss as well as the whole of the profit which the plaintiff would have made, because the plaintiff could not have earned the profit without incurring capital expenditure. The plaintiff was found to have conceded that he was only entitled to recover up to the date of the trial which effectively limited the claim to profits to three years even though the machinery had an expected life of 10 years. A majority of the court held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover lost profit for the three-year period, but not his loss of capital as well. The British ‘Rema’ case was distinguished by the High Court in TC Industrial Plant Pty Ltd v Robert’s Queensland Pty Ltd.68 The plaintiff purchased a machine known as a ‘Hazemag’ Impeller Breaker, designed to crush stone and gravel, in order to fulfil a contract entered into with the Commonwealth for the supply of crushed stone. The machine was found to be unsuitable for the plaintiff’s purpose and it was able to establish that this constituted a breach of a term of the contract. The machine was rejected and the plaintiff claimed damages. The trial judge awarded £15,889 to cover wasted expenditure and £12,000 to represent the profit lost by reason of the plaintiff’s inability to fulfil its contract with the Commonwealth. The defendants argued that these heads of damage could not be combined. The court made three points:
[page 822] (1) The justification of the court’s refusal in the British ‘Rema’ case to award the capital outlay lay in the failure to claim profits for the final seven years of the machine’s life. (2) In the instant case, since the machine had been rejected by the plaintiff there was no ‘residual value’ to be allowed for. In other words, there was no need for the plaintiffs to give credit for the depreciated value of the machine. The plaintiff was therefore able to recover the costs incurred in purchasing the machine and trying to employ it in the contract with the Commonwealth, less payments received from the Commonwealth. The trial judge had assessed this sum as £15,889. (3) However, the court was not satisfied that £12,000 was the correct figure to award for loss of profit. The case was therefore remitted to the Supreme Court of Queensland for damages to be re-assessed. The TC Industrial Plant case expresses the view that expectation damages, in the form of lost profit, can be recovered in addition to reliance damages — wasted expenditure — provided that the award does not allow the plaintiff to recover profit without spending the money required to make that profit.69
Date for Assessment70 [35-14] General rule. The general rule in contract is that damages are assessed, on a once and for all basis,71 at the date of breach.72 For example, a buyer’s damages for non-delivery are assessed as at the time appointed for delivery or, if there is no time appointed, the time of the seller’s refusal or failure to deliver.73 There are, however, exceptions to the general rule. Given that inflation is generally not taken into account when assessing damages,74 and that damages are assessed on a once and for all basis, the choice of date for assessment may have considerable impact. The earlier the date chosen the more that the plaintiff bears the risk of inflation. This provides some incentive for the courts to treat the choice of date as a matter of judgment rather than an inflexible rule.75 Although the general rule is still frequently applied in contract cases, probably more so than in tort, it might well be a more accurate
description of the choice of date process in the recent cases to say that the appropriate date is when the plaintiff’s loss crystallises.76 [page 823] [35-15] Exceptions. In Johnson v Agnew77 Lord Wilberforce stated that, even in contracts of sale where the general rule is most frequently applied, it will not be applied if to do so ‘would give rise to injustice’, in which case the court has the power to ‘fix such other date as may be appropriate in the circumstances’. For example, in Radford v De Froberville78 the defendant purchased land from the plaintiff under a contract which provided that she would ‘forthwith erect … a brick wall’ separating the land from that owned by the plaintiff. The contract specified the height and minimum thickness of the wall and the materials to be used. In fact, the wall was never built and the plaintiff claimed damages for breach of the building covenant. Oliver J concluded that the correct measure of damages was the cost to the plaintiff in carrying out the work on his own land.79 He held that these damages had to be assessed as at the date of the hearing so as to place the plaintiff in as good a position as if the defendant had performed. He also said that this sum might be reduced if the plaintiff ought reasonably to have mitigated his loss by seeking ‘an alternative performance at an earlier date’.80 [35-16] Period covered by the award. The plaintiff’s cause of action in damages for breach must be complete at the time when the action is brought and the plaintiff cannot, for example, recover as damages money which would have been payable at a later date.81 However, the rule only restricts recovery where a future sum depends on a fresh cause of action. For example, if a lessee is late in paying rent, future rental payments cannot be recovered as damages if there is no breach by the lessee of the obligation to pay the future sums. On the other hand, in cases where the plaintiff has terminated the performance of the contract for repudiation by the defendant, there is no objection to future sums being awarded, because the breach is regarded as extending further than the obligations which have fallen due for performance.82 In such cases a discount may be necessary to take account of future contingencies.83 However, no discount will be necessary in respect of sums which would have been payable after the repudiation but which would have accrued due prior to judgment being given.84
Difficulty of Assessment
[35-17] No bar to recovery. At times the assessment of damages is extremely difficult, particularly where a speculative claim is in issue.85 But it is well established that difficulty of assessment is not a bar to recovery,86 [page 824] provided, of course, that the difficulty does not arise from the fact that the plaintiff has produced no evidence of loss or damage. As was explained earlier,87 the absence of such evidence means that the plaintiff will be restricted to a nominal sum. Where damages are difficult to assess because the plaintiff has produced evidence which, while establishing some loss or damage, does not permit the court to make as reliable an assessment as should have been possible, the plaintiff cannot complain if the award is not as high as it would have been had reliable information been produced.88 [35-18] Relevance to basis of assessment.The fact that damages are difficult to assess on one basis may lead the court to award a sum on some other basis. For example, in McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission89 it was impossible for the court to place any value on what the Commission had purported to sell and the plaintiff’s claim for loss of bargain damages would have been restricted to the recovery of the price paid (£285) plus nominal damages, because the subject matter was impossible to value. Accordingly, the court awarded damages on a reliance (rather than expectation) basis.
Causation and Remoteness [35-19] Methods of limiting the award. The view is taken, in the law of contract as well as tort, that a defendant should not be held responsible for every loss suffered by a plaintiff and in some way associated with the defendant’s wrong. There are two main ways by which the court’s award is limited: (1) a causation requirement; and (2) a remoteness requirement. Other factors, such as mitigation90 of loss, also operate, in most cases, to reinforce the requirements of causation and remoteness. Like those concepts, these also keep the defendant’s responsibility within acceptable bounds.
Causation [35-20] Causal connection required. Causation is a question of fact91 not law. As Lord Wright said in Monarch SS Co Ltd v A/B Karlshamns Oljefabriker92 causation does not ‘depend on remoteness or immediacy in time’. Causation refers to the connection between the breach and the loss [page 825] suffered. The law is ‘not concerned with philosophic speculation, but is only concerned with ordinary everyday life and thoughts and expressions’.93 Therefore, rather than making a scientific or philosophical inquiry, the relevant question is whether the defendant’s breach was so connected with the plaintiff’s loss or damage that, ‘as a matter of ordinary common sense and experience it should be regarded as a cause of it’.94 A sufficient connection will be established if the plaintiff proves95 that the loss or damage in question would not have been suffered but for the defendant’s breach. For example, in Reg Glass Pty Ltd v Rivers Locking Systems Pty Ltd96 the defendants agreed to supply and install a burglar-proof door. A breach of contract was established by proof that the door, when locked, was not reasonably fit to keep burglars out. Therefore, when burglars broke in through the door and stole stock from their premises the plaintiffs were able to recover damages. The position would have been different if it had been proved that the burglars would have gained entry through a door which was reasonably fit. Although the breach must cause the plaintiff’s loss, so that, metaphorically, there is a chain of causation between the breach and the loss, satisfaction of the ‘but for’ test is not always essential.97 Indeed, in so far as the test requires the absence of any other cause, it is not satisfactory. In both tort and contract a loss may be regarded as having been caused by a breach even though the test is not satisfied.98 Account must therefore be taken of the possibility that:99 multiple causes contributed to the loss; and the chain of causation may be broken. [35-21] Multiple causes. Difficulties of causation may arise where the plaintiff’s loss or damage occurs partly as a result of the defendant’s breach and partly as a result of some other factor. Nevertheless, if there are concurrent causes it is
sufficient that one of these is the defendant’s breach.100 In cases where one factor has more relevance than others it is sufficient for the defendant’s breach to be the ‘decisive’ or ‘dominant’ cause.101 However, the object of such descriptions is to exclude cases where the contribution of the breach is minimal and they should not be taken as requiring the breach to be the dominant cause of the loss or damage.102 Thus, most formulations of causation now accept that it is sufficient for the [page 826] breach to be a cause of the loss or damage.103 Because the ‘but for’ test is not an exclusive test of causation, where damages are claimed for negligence, the law in both tort and contract is that a loss may be regarded as having been caused by a breach even though the test is not satisfied because of the presence of some other factor.104 But if the loss or damage is, as a matter of common sense, caused by factors for which the defendant is not responsible, the causation requirement will not be satisfied.105 Although what was reasonably contemplated as the consequence of breach is a criterion for remoteness not causation, it may sometimes be relevant to consider the knowledge of the parties.106 [35-22] Breaks in the chain.If an extraneous event, or the conduct of the plaintiff or a third party, intervenes in such a way as to break the chain of causation between the defendant’s breach and the plaintiff’s loss or damage, the plaintiff will be restricted to a claim for a nominal sum. For example, in Lexmead (Basingstoke) Ltd v Lewis107 the purchaser of a coupling claimed damages from the suppliers and relied on the fact that the coupling — used to join his Land Rover to a trailer — had a design defect. The trailer became detached and a serious accident resulted. But the House of Lords found that the cause of the accident was really the purchaser’s negligence in continuing to use the coupling for a considerable period after he had noticed that the handle which operated the locking mechanism was broken. On the other hand, in Monarch SS Co Ltd v A/B Karlshamns Oljefabriker108 a vessel’s voyage to a port in Sweden was protracted because of its unseaworthiness and, during the course of the voyage, the vessel was ordered by the British Admiralty to discharge her cargo at Glasgow. Had the vessel not been delayed the indorsees of the bills of lading relating to the cargo would not have been required to forward the goods in
neutral ships to Sweden. The House of Lords held that as the orders of the Admiralty were a foreseeable consequence of delay during war there was no break in the chain of causation. The fact that damage is suffered as a result of a wrongful act of a third party does not necessarily break the chain of causation between breach and loss. This is because in some situations the duty of the defendant extends to prevention of a wrong by a third party.109 [page 827]
Remoteness of Damage110 [35-23] The remoteness concept. The plaintiff’s loss or damage, even if caused by the defendant’s breach, must not be too remote. Although the question whether or not a particular item of loss or damage is capable of coming within the concept of remoteness is probably a question of law,111 once this has been established remoteness is a question of fact.112 It is necessary to distinguish the test of remoteness under the first limb of the rule in Hadley v Baxendale113 from that applied under the second limb. Although the second limb of the rule is usually concerned with knowledge which increases the defendant’s liability, there is no reason the defendant’s knowledge should not be used to reduce the award to the plaintiff.114
First limb of Hadley v Baxendale [35-24] How remote? Under the first limb of the rule in Hadley v Baxendale115 the damages claimed must flow ‘according to the usual course of things’ from the defendant’s breach. But what degree of certainty is actually required? Over the years the courts have tried to reformulate (or at least paraphrase) Alderson B’s statement, but without any obvious success. For example, in Monarch SS Co Ltd v A/B Karlshamns Oljefabriker116 Lord du Parcq put the test in terms of what would have been foreseen as a ‘serious possibility’ and Lord Morton spoke of a ‘grave risk’.117 On the other hand, in Victoria Laundry (Windsor) Ltd v Newman Industries Ltd118 the English Court of Appeal expressed the criterion in terms of ‘reasonably foreseeable’ losses, and losses ‘likely to result’ or even
those which are ‘on the cards’. In Koufos v C Czarnikow Ltd,119 where the House of Lords reviewed the authorities, the view was taken that ‘reasonably foreseeable’ is more appropriate to tort than contract cases,120 and that ‘on the cards’ is far too imprecise. However, there was no real agreement on the proper criterion to be applied: Lord Reid preferred the criterion of ‘not unlikely’ to result;121 [page 828] Lord Morris did not dissent from that view but he indicated that ‘liable to result’ was also acceptable;122 Lord Hodson indicated a preference for ‘liable to result’;123 and Lord Pearce found ‘liable to result’ somewhat ambiguous124 and, like Lord Upjohn,125 preferred to state the criterion in terms of ‘serious possibility’ or ‘real danger’. The balance of Australian authority would seem to accept Lord Reid’s approach.126 The discussion in the Koufos case is hardly conclusive in favour of any one of the various expressions used. It does, however, indicate that a fairly high degree of probability is required in contract, certainly higher than that applied to damages claims in tort.127 [35-25] Losses in the ‘usual course of things’. Because each contract is unique, in one sense only limited assistance can be gained from previous cases on what is, or is not, to be regarded as in the usual course of things. In Hadley v Baxendale128 itself, the plaintiffs, owners of a flour mill, contracted with the defendants, who were common carriers, to have a broken crankshaft conveyed to engineers for the purpose of manufacturing a new shaft. Delivery of the shaft was delayed and the consequence for the plaintiffs was that the mill was stopped for five days longer than it should have been and profits which would otherwise have accrued were lost. The court held that the defendants were not liable for the lost profits. They were merely carriers who did not know that the mill would be stopped. The plaintiffs might, for example, have had a spare shaft in their possession, and the plaintiffs’ loss of profit was not something which the defendants should have contemplated as occurring in the usual course of things.
From a broader perspective, Hadley v Baxendale illustrates a general approach under which the first limb reflects a ‘conventional’ measure of loss. This is highlighted by the presumptive measures applicable to the breach of sale of goods contracts.129 These and other similar measures give content to the ‘usual course of things’, so that a plaintiff who seeks to recover on a different basis may be required to justify the claim by reference to the second limb. However, this is not always the case. Thus, in Koufos v C Czarnikow Ltd130 what was previously thought to be the prima facie measure applicable to contracts of carriage by sea was displaced in favour of the prima facie measure analogous to that applicable to late delivery [page 829] under a contract of sale.131 The defendants, owners of the vessel Heron II, were thus held liable for profit lost by the plaintiffs, charterers of the vessel. The defendants had agreed to carry sugar from Constanza to Basrah but deviated during the course of the voyage, with the result that it took nine or 10 days longer than it should have to reach Basrah. Sugar prices fell on the Basrah market and the plaintiffs suffered loss of profit by selling at a lower price than would have been obtained had the vessel not deviated. The House of Lords held that the loss occurred in the ‘usual course of things’ because the defendants knew: (1) that the plaintiffs were sugar merchants; and (2) that there was a market for sugar at Basrah. It did not matter that they had no actual knowledge of the plaintiffs’ intention to sell because they ought to have contemplated that the plaintiffs would, under the criteria applied, suffer the loss in question. In Transfield Shipping Inc v Mercator Shipping Inc (The Achilleas),132 the plaintiffs time-chartered the vessel Achilleas to the defendants at a daily rate of US$16,750. The vessel was due to be redelivered on 2 May 2004. In anticipation of the expiry of the charter, the plaintiffs contracted to charter the vessel at US$39,500 per day (the market rate at that time) under a ‘follow-on’ charterparty with another charterer. That contract included a clause under which it could be cancelled if the vessel was not made available on 8 May (the ‘cancellation date’). The defendants fixed the final voyage for the vessel less than 14 days
prior to the end of their charter. The plaintiffs did not object. Unfortunately, the vessel was delayed and it became clear that the plaintiffs would not be able to make the vessel available under the follow-on charter prior to the cancellation date. In order to obtain an extension of the cancellation date until 11 May, the plaintiffs agreed to reduce the rate of hire under the follow-on charterparty to US$31,500 per day. The plaintiffs sustained a loss of US$1.36 million. It was this sum which they claimed from the defendants for breach of contract, that is, delay in redelivery of the vessel. The normal (conventional) measure of damages in such a case is the difference between the market rate and the charter rate of hire for the period of delay, a sum of $158,301. However, a majority of the arbitrators found in favour of the plaintiffs on the basis that the loss which the plaintiffs claimed arose in the ‘usual course of things’ from the defendants’ breach of contract. That decision was upheld by Christopher Clarke J,133 and by the English Court of Appeal.134 It was, however, reversed by the House of Lords. The reasoning is far from uniform. However, Lord Hoffmann’s speech has attracted the most interest. He said135 that ‘one must first decide whether the loss for which compensation is sought is of a “kind” or “type” for which the contractbreaker ought fairly to be taken to have accepted responsibility’. In deciding whether the loss for which compensation is sought is the same or of a different ‘kind’ or ‘type’, he reasoned:136 [page 830] In my opinion, the only rational basis for the distinction is that it reflects what would reasonably have been regarded by the contracting party as significant for the purposes of the risk he was undertaking. In Victoria Laundry (Windsor) Ltd v Newman Industries Ltd [1949] 2 KB 528, where the plaintiffs claimed for loss of the profits from their laundry business because of late delivery of a boiler, the Court of Appeal did not regard ‘loss of profits from the laundry business’ as a single type of loss. They distinguished ([1949] 2 KB 528 at 543), losses from ‘particularly lucrative dyeing contracts’ as a different type of loss which would only be recoverable if the defendant had sufficient knowledge of them to make it reasonable to attribute to him acceptance of liability for such losses. The vendor of the boilers would have regarded the profits on these contracts as a different and higher form of risk than the general risk of loss of profits by the laundry.
Applying this approach, Lord Hoffmann concluded137 that the parties ‘would have considered losses arising from the loss of the following fixture a type or kind of loss for which the charterer was not assuming responsibility’. Lord Hoffmann’s speech raises fundamental issues about the application of
the rule in Hadley v Baxendale, if not the very basis for liability in damages for breach of contract.138 In the subsequent English cases, various interpretations have been given to Lord Hoffmann’s speech, as well as to what was decided in The Achilleas and how it should be applied.139 In one sense it might be said, simply, that the decision in The Achilleas brings into sharp relief the problems inherent in the decision in Koufos to seek to express ‘the usual course of things’ in terms of probabilities.140 The loss which the plaintiffs claimed in The Achilleas was not a loss which would be suffered by other similarly placed shipowners in the usual course of things. The loss claimed was a specific loss which arose because of the combination of several circumstances which were peculiar to the plaintiffs. In relation to Lord Hoffmann’s assumption of responsibility approach, although it seems clear that the first limb of the rule in Hadley v Baxendale does indeed express a criterion which relies on the assumption by contracting parties of a responsibility for particular types of loss, namely, those which arise in the usual course of things, it is not clear whether Lord Hoffmann was explaining how that should be applied or suggesting a reformulation of the approach to remoteness. [35-26] Causes of action in both contract and tort. If, as has been suggested,141 the remoteness test in contract differs from that in tort, what is the position where a plaintiff has concurrent causes of action in contract and tort? The decision in H Parsons (Livestock) Ltd v Uttley Ingham & Co Ltd142 seems to indicate that, whether the plaintiff frames the action in [page 831] contract or tort, damages will be assessed on the more favourable test. However, the reasoning in the case is not always easy to follow. The plaintiffs, owners and managers of a pig farm, purchased a bulk feed storage hopper from the defendants, who were the manufacturers. Unknown to the plaintiffs, when the hopper was delivered the ventilator lid on the top of the hopper was not opened. The plaintiffs used the hopper to feed pig nuts to their herd, but because of the absence of proper ventilation the nuts became mouldy and eating the mould caused the pigs to become ill. In fact, a large number of pigs died and the plaintiffs suffered a very large financial loss. The trial judge found that at the time of purchase neither party could ‘reasonably have contemplated that there was either a very substantial degree of possibility or a real danger or serious possibility’ that feeding the pigs mouldy nuts would cause illness. But he also
found that the ‘natural result of feeding toxic food to animals is damage to their health and maybe death, which is what occurred, albeit from a hitherto unknown disease and to particularly susceptible animals’. In the result he upheld the plaintiffs’ claim and left damages to be assessed by an official referee. In the English Court of Appeal, Lord Denning MR drew a distinction between, on the one hand, claims for loss of profit consequent on breach and, on the other, claims for compensation for physical damage caused by a breach of contract. He said that in the former case the strict criteria discussed in Koufos v C Czarnikow Ltd143 apply, whereas in the latter case the criterion applied to tortious claims is relevant so that the defendant is liable for ‘any loss or expense which he ought reasonably to have foreseen at the time of the breach as a possible consequence’.144 In the instant case he had no doubt that the type or kind of damage suffered by the plaintiffs was reasonably foreseeable and held145 that the defendants were liable in respect of the pigs which died and for veterinary expenses and so on, but not for the profit lost on future sales. Scarman LJ, with whom Orr LJ agreed, rejected the distinction drawn by Lord Denning. He took the view that, generally, the test for remoteness should not differ between contract and tort according to the classification of the plaintiff’s cause of action. He said146 that ‘the law is not so absurd as to differentiate between contract and tort save in situations where the agreement, or the factual relationship, of the parties with each other requires it in the interests of justice’. Having regard to this statement, and his inclination towards the view that the difference between the contract test and the tort test is ‘semantic, not substantial’147 one might have expected analysis of the plaintiffs’ claim by reference to the test applied in tortious actions. However, Scarman LJ was concerned to show that the defendants were liable under a contract criterion of ‘serious possibility’. [page 832] This resulted in some minute, and not entirely convincing, discussion of the trial judge’s findings of fact. He said that the first of the two findings was not conclusive against the plaintiffs because it was not a finding that the defendants ‘could not reasonably have had in contemplation that a hopper unfit for its purpose of storing food in a condition suitable for feeding to the pigs might well lead to illness’.148 He was then able to treat the second finding as establishing, as
a serious possibility, that if the hopper proved to be unsuitable by reason of the lack of ventilation, the pigs would become ill. Moreover, once illness was foreseeable as a serious possibility it did not matter that the degree of illness suffered could not have been contemplated.149
Second limb of Hadley v Baxendale [35-27] Degree of knowledge required. A plaintiff who claims in respect of loss or damage which does not arise in the ‘usual course of things’ must bring the claim within the second limb of the rule stated in Hadley v Baxendale,150 by relying on knowledge actually possessed by the defendant. For example, in McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission151 the court took the view that the plaintiffs’ expenditure fell within the second limb, presumably on the basis that the defendants, having promised that a tanker existed, had actual knowledge of the need for salvage operations. On the other hand, in Victoria Laundry (Windsor) Ltd v Newman Industries Ltd152 the requisite degree of knowledge was lacking. The plaintiffs, who carried on business as launderers and dyers, purchased a boiler of considerable capacity from the defendants for the purpose of expanding their operations. The plaintiffs sent a lorry to take delivery but found that the boiler had been damaged. They therefore refused to take delivery until repairs had been carried out and this caused a delay of some five months. The issue before the English Court of Appeal was whether, in addition to a sum of £110 awarded by the trial judge, the plaintiffs were entitled to claim in respect of the business profits which they would have made had the boiler been delivered punctually. They relied on the defendants’ knowledge that the plaintiffs were launderers and dyers who needed the boiler for use in their business. They relied on the fact that during negotiations the defendants had been informed of the plaintiffs’ intention ‘to put it into use in the shortest space of time’. The court held the plaintiffs entitled to recover something for lost profits but not necessarily the profits actually lost. The defendants did not know the precise role of the boiler, that is, whether it was to be an extra unit or to operate in substitution for another boiler. It was, therefore, important to consider how the profits claimed had been calculated. The plaintiffs said a very large number of new customers could have been served and that a number of highly lucrative dyeing contracts for the Ministry of Supply would have been available to them. The court held that the judge was wrong not to award some ‘general (and perhaps conjectural) sum for loss of
[page 833] business in respect of dyeing contracts to be reasonably expected’.153 But it rejected the claim to recover specifically the profit on contracts with the Ministry for the reason that the defendants had no knowledge of this business. [35-28] Acceptance of therisk.The most difficult aspect of the second limb of the rule stated in Hadley v Baxendale154 is the extent to which the defendant must have agreed to accept the risk of the damage. At one time it seems to have been thought that there must be a term of the contract indicating the defendant’s acceptance of the risk.155 Although this view has been rejected,156 there is, of course, nothing to stop the parties expressing their agreement on what is to be regarded as foreseeable.157 Where there is no express agreement it has been said158 that the: basis of the defendant’s liability … is his implied undertaking to the plaintiff to bear it. His actual knowledge of the special circumstances is relevant as one of the factors from which his undertaking can be implied. The second factor is also necessary, viz, that he should have acquired this knowledge from the plaintiff, or at least that he should know that the plaintiff knew that he was possessed of it at the time the contract was entered into and so could reasonably foresee at that time that an enhanced loss was liable to result from a breach. Where both these factors are present, the defendant’s conduct in entering into the contract without disclaiming liability for the enhanced loss which he can foresee gives rise to the implication that he undertakes to bear it.
On this view the court will, as a matter of law, draw the inference that the defendant has accepted responsibility if the defendant acquired the necessary information from the plaintiff and took no steps to disclaim liability, for example, by having a clause limiting liability in damages inserted in the contract. Thus, in Gull v Saunders159 the plaintiffs purchased an engine and pump from the defendants for the purpose of irrigating their farm. The engine did not prove to be suitable for the plaintiffs’ purpose and they suffered loss to their crops. In deciding that the defendants were responsible under the second limb, the High Court pointed out that during negotiations the defendants were told: that the engine had to be of sufficient power to do work of a special kind; that the engine was to be used for irrigation; the nature of the crop; and that failure by the plaintiffs in their irrigation project would in all probability result in the loss of their crop. Clearly, on these facts it was just to hold the defendants responsible for the risk in the absence of disclaimer on their part.
[page 834] In order to rebut the presumption implied by actual knowledge the defendant must show that there was no acceptance of the risk of liability for the damage. In commercial contracts this may be achieved by a suitably drafted exclusion clause.160 In respect of other types of contracts the defendant may perhaps rely on the fact that the price for performance is out of all proportion with the risk implied by the knowledge obtained.
Contributory Negligence [35-29] Introduction. ‘Contributory negligence’ does not refer to the breach of a duty of care. Rather, it refers to a careless act or omission of the plaintiff which contributes to the loss or damage which forms the subject of the plaintiff’s claim for damages. At common law, the contributory negligence of the plaintiff is not a defence to a claim for breach of contract. In other words, unless the contract provides to the contrary, it is not a defence to a claim for breach of contract for a defendant to show that the plaintiff’s carelessness contributed to the loss or damage which forms the subject of the plaintiff’s claim.161 Nevertheless, as we have seen,162 a plaintiff must prove that its loss or damage was caused by the defendant’s breach of contract. This requirement necessarily means that if the plaintiff’s own carelessness breaks the chain of causation between the breach and the loss or damage the plaintiff will fail. This is on the basis that the loss or damage was not caused by the breach, and not on the basis of contributory negligence. For example, in Lexmead (Basingstoke) Ltd v Lewis163 the supplier of the coupling was in breach of contract by reason of the defect in the goods even though there was no negligence on his part. But the purchaser’s negligence in continuing to use it after it had become broken constituted conduct which broke the chain of causation between the supplier’s breach and the plaintiff’s loss. The position in tort was somewhat different. At least in relation to the tort of negligence, at common law a plaintiff would fail completely in relation to any claim relying on loss or damage resulting in part from the plaintiff’s own carelessness. This defence of contributory negligence operated in addition to the causation requirement. However, the law was modified by the apportionment legislation,164 under which contributory negligence ceased to be a total defence.
In place of the all or nothing approach of the common law, the apportionment legislation requires the court to reduce the plaintiff’s claim to reflect the plaintiff’s degree of responsibility for the loss or damage. Until the decision of the High Court in Astley v Austrust Ltd165 there was considerable doubt whether that legislation, as originally enacted, applied to claims in contract.166 However, in Astley the High Court held that the legislation does not apply to claims in contract. The effect of that decision [page 835] was soon reversed by amendment to the apportionment legislation. However, Astley continues to govern the matter in situations to which the amended legislation does not apply. [35-30] Apportionment legislation. Apportionment legislation has been enacted in all jurisdictions.167 The legislation applies to certain claims for breach of contract. Section 9(1) of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1965 (NSW)168 provides: If a person (the claimant) suffers damage as the result partly of the claimant’s failure to take reasonable care (contributory negligence) and partly of the wrong of any other person: (a) a claim in respect of the damage is not defeated by reason of the contributory negligence of the claimant, and (b) the damages recoverable in respect of the wrong are to be reduced to such extent as the court thinks just and equitable having regard to the claimant’s share in the responsibility for the damage.
Section 8 of the Act169 defines ‘wrong’ as an act or omission that: (a) gives rise to a liability in tort in respect of which a defence of contributory negligence is available at common law, or (b) amounts to a breach of a contractual duty of care that is concurrent and co-extensive with a duty of care in tort.
Therefore, if a plaintiff claims damages for the ‘breach of a contractual duty of care’, and that duty is ‘concurrent and co-extensive with a duty of care in tort’, the plaintiff’s claim must be reduced ‘to such extent as the court thinks just and equitable’ having regard to the plaintiff’s ‘share in the responsibility for the damage’.170
[page 836] In situations to which the legislation is not applicable, the common law applies and the court will have no jurisdiction to apportion loss or damage by reducing an award in contract, unless the contract provides the contrary, even in cases where the defendant is liable in both tort and contract. Accordingly, where the contractual duty of care is not concurrent and coextensive with a duty of care in tort, the position summarised by Manning JA in Harper v Ashtons Circus Pty Ltd171 will be applicable. He explained that a plaintiff, entitled to sue in contract or tort, may avoid apportionment by abandoning the claim in tort (to which the apportionment legislation would apply) and electing to sue in contract. The common law position will also apply in cases where the defendant’s breach does not involve the breach of a contractual duty of care.172 And the apportionment legislation does not apply where application of the apportionment legislation would defeat a defence arising under a contract.173 Moreover, if the contract (or statute) provides for a limitation of liability which is applicable to the claim, the amount of damages recoverable by the plaintiff (as determined by the court) must not exceed that limitation.174 [35-31] Breach of concurrent duty. The apportionment legislation will be relevant to a claim for damages for breach of contract if the breach by the defendant amounts to the ‘breach of a contractual duty of care that is concurrent and co-extensive with a duty of care in tort’.175 This has three elements: (1) the defendant has undertaken a contractual duty of care; (2) under common law principles of negligence the defendant is also subject to a tortious duty of care; and (3) the contractual duty is concurrent and co-extensive with the tortious duty. As a general rule, where the defendant owes a contractual duty of care, a breach of that duty176 will give rise to concurrent liability in tort and contract. The contractual duty undertaken by the defendant may be express. However, there is no reason to doubt that the implied duty may [page 837] arise under the general law of implied terms or by reason of statute. The three
elements serve to capture situations in which, prior to Astley v Austrust Ltd,177 some courts had held the apportionment legislation to apply. Although the reasoning in those cases must now be seen as based on an erroneous interpretation of the legislation, they may be of some assistance in the application of the recently enacted provisions. The most likely context in which the contributory negligence of the plaintiff will be relevant is where a professional person such as a doctor, solicitor or engineer breaches an express or implied duty to exercise care in the performance of services, and the carelessness of the client contributes to the loss.178 For example, the view that negligence by a solicitor in the conduct of a client’s affairs gives rise to a liability in contract, but not tort,179 has been exploded.180 However, it will depend on the circumstances whether the duty in contract is coextensive with a common law duty of care. In cases where the duties differ, the apportionment legislation will not apply to a claim for breach of contract. [35-32] Cases of strict liability. In cases of strict liability, a defendant who has exercised reasonable care may nevertheless be found to be in breach of contract.181 For example, a seller who supplies goods which are not fit for the buyer’s purpose is in breach of contract even if reasonable care has been exercised. The apportionment legislation is not relevant to such cases.182 This remains true even if the plaintiff has in fact been negligent, because the defendant’s breach does not amount to the ‘breach of a contractual duty of care that is concurrent and co-extensive with a duty of care in tort’.183 Thus, the only relevance of the negligence of the plaintiff in such cases is whether it breaks the chain of causation between the defendant’s breach and the loss or damage.184
Mitigation of Loss [35-33] The mitigation concept. The concept of mitigation cannot be defined with any real precision. Nevertheless, it is usually used in connection with: [page 838] (1) steps which the plaintiff has taken which do, in fact, operate to minimise loss; and
steps which the plaintiff ought — acting reasonably — to have taken so (2) as to minimise loss or at least so as not to increase it. In cases where it is contended that the plaintiff should have taken steps to mitigate its loss, the onus of proof is on the defendant to prove this contention.185 [35-34] Benefits obtained.Where, as a consequence of the defendant’s breach, the plaintiff obtains benefits which would not otherwise have been available, the plaintiff is usually required to bring these into account. This will reduce the amount recoverable from the defendant. For example, when an employee is wrongfully dismissed by an employer, the employee must give credit for sums earned from another employer.186 Thus, assuming that the employee has not been out of work for any time, damages will be expressed as the difference between the sum which the first employer agreed to pay and that received from the second employer. A more complex illustration is Lavarack v Woods of Colchester Ltd.187 The plaintiff was employed by the defendants in a senior position for a five-year period. A little over two years later the plaintiff was wrongfully dismissed. The plaintiff took up alternative employment and it was held that he had to give credit for this. Thus, the salary which he received had to be deducted from the salary which he would have received from the defendants. But he had also taken a financial interest in his new employers — by the purchase of shares — and in a new company to which he had lent money. Did the plaintiff have to give credit for these investments? The court held that although the investments would not have been possible but for the termination of his employment with the defendants, the plaintiff was only required to give credit for the first investment. Lord Denning MR described188 the second as an ‘entirely collateral benefit’. Lavarack illustrates that benefits obtained must be attributable to the breach, and not merely collateral. The leading case is British Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Co Ltd v Underground Electric Railways Co of London Ltd.189 A contract for the sale of steam turbines and alternators required British Westinghouse to deliver and erect the machinery in accordance with a specification annexed to the contract. Disputes arose and the Railways Co claimed that the machines provided did not satisfy the terms of the contract with regard to economy and steam consumption. They claimed £280,000, which was their estimate of the loss caused by excessive coal consumption for the life of the machines, estimated to be 20 years. Alternatively, a claim was made for the cost of installing new
[page 839] machines of greater capacity which had in fact been purchased. This cost was a little over £78,000, to which the Railways Co added £42,000 representing the loss caused by excess coal consumption while British Westinghouse’s machines were in operation and before the new machines could be installed. The arbitrator found that the installation of the new machines mitigated or prevented the loss or damage which would have occurred had the Railways Co continued to use the defective machinery. He also found that, since the new machines were superior, had the machines of British Westinghouse complied with the contract it would still have been to the advantage of the Railways Co to have replaced them. The House of Lords held that the benefits obtained by the Railways Co were not collateral but were, at least in part, attributable to the breach of contract which had taken place. The case was therefore remitted to the arbitrator for an assessment of damages on the basis that the benefits of the purchase of the new machines had to be taken into account. Where a plaintiff has suffered loss or damage by reason of the defendant’s breach, but has received benefits which are taken into account as mitigation of the loss or damage, the plaintiff need only give credit for the ‘net gain accruing to him’.190 For example, a wrongfully dismissed employee who recovers damages from the employer, but is required to account for the wages received from a new employer by way of mitigation, is entitled to recover as damages the cost of obtaining new employment. Therefore, in arriving at a net figure, the employee’s travelling, advertising expenses and so on may be deducted from the wages received from the new employer. [35-35] Failure to minimise loss. The second aspect of mitigation concerns the failure of a plaintiff to take steps which would operate to decrease loss. In this context it is frequently said that there is a ‘duty’ to mitigate. However, it is a little misleading to speak in terms of a ‘duty’.191 To begin with there is no positive duty to take steps to minimise loss, rather it is a duty not to act unreasonably.192 Second, if the duty is not discharged there is no liability in damages,193 the ‘breach’ being reflected in the reduction of the plaintiff’s award. In effect, therefore, the plaintiff is ‘debarred’ from claiming some or all of its loss.194 Whether the plaintiff has acted reasonably or unreasonably must depend on the circumstances of the case, and the authorities are of limited guidance.
Typically, the issue arises in contracts for the sale of goods in cases of anticipatory breach.195 But it can also arise with respect to other [page 840] contracts. For example, in Shindler v Northern Raincoat Co Ltd196 the plaintiff, a company director wrongfully dismissed by the defendants, refused to accept employment by a company related to the defendants, who therefore contended that the plaintiff had acted unreasonably. Diplock J held otherwise. Having regard to the senior position occupied by the plaintiff, the fact that litigation had commenced between the plaintiff and the defendants, and the friction which existed between the plaintiff and executives in the company, it was, ‘as a matter of common sense’,197 not right to say that the plaintiff had acted unreasonably. On the other hand, in Brace v Calder198 the plaintiff was employed by the defendants, who carried on business in partnership, as a manager for a period of two years. Six months later the partnership was dissolved and this was held by a majority of the court to constitute a wrongful dismissal of the plaintiff. But the business had been transferred to two of the original partners who offered to retain the plaintiff’s services on the same terms as he had been employed by the defendants. The plaintiff refused this offer and the court said that he had acted unreasonably in doing so. Consequently, only nominal damages were awarded. The position might have been different had the offer been for employment with a reduced salary or status. Generally speaking it will be unreasonable to require a plaintiff, in the name of mitigation, to take steps which would injure the plaintiff’s commercial reputation.199 [35-36] Increasing the loss. The mere fact that the conduct of the plaintiff has increased the loss which would otherwise have flowed from the defendant’s breach does not necessarily mean that the plaintiff is unable to recover the increased loss. The plaintiff will be unable to recover the increased loss if the conduct is unreasonable. For example, in Ardlethan Options Ltd v Easdown200 the plaintiff claimed damages for the defendant’s refusal to issue share certificates or scrip. Had he gone to the office of the company he would have obtained the certificates. But, instead of doing so, he stood by and allowed the shares to dwindle in value. This was described by Isaacs J201 as ‘most unbusinesslike and unreasonable’, and the plaintiff’s damages were therefore
reduced. On the other hand, a plaintiff who has acted reasonably may be entitled to recover the increased loss. Thus, in Banco de Portugal v Waterlow & Sons Ltd202 the defendants agreed to print bank notes for the plaintiffs. They printed, and delivered to the plaintiffs, 600,000 Vasco da Gama 500 escudo [page 841] notes which were put into circulation in Portugal. The defendants then breached their contract by delivering 580,000 of the same type of notes to the head of a band of criminals, in the belief that he had the plaintiffs’ authority to receive them. The reaction of the plaintiffs was to withdraw the whole issue from circulation. They also agreed to exchange on presentation all 500 escudo notes for their face value. A majority of the House of Lords held that the proper measure of the plaintiffs’ loss was the exchange value of the genuine currency given for the Vasco da Gama 500 escudo notes, plus the cost of printing the genuine Vasco da Gama 500 escudo notes which had been withdrawn. It was emphasised that the plaintiffs were not bound to do any act which would have injured their commercial reputation, and that the failure to take the steps which had been taken would have involved a breach of the plaintiffs’ duty to their shareholders, customers and country. It was therefore reasonable for the plaintiffs to exchange the forged notes for valid notes of equal value.203 [35-37] Scope of themitigation principles. There are three important limitations on the scope of the mitigation principles. First, no question of mitigation can arise until a breach has taken place.204 Thus, in Shindler v Northern Raincoat Co Ltd205 the plaintiff was entitled to disregard offers of employment made between the time when the defendants first repudiated their obligations and the termination of his office as director. Second, in cases where a repudiation precedes the time for performance, it is not part of the mitigation rules to consider whether the plaintiff behaved reasonably in deciding to terminate206 or to continue with performance.207 Third, the principles do not apply unless damages are actually being claimed. Thus, if the plaintiff is able to frame the claim as one for the recovery of a liquidated sum, no question of mitigation will arise.208 A quite different issue is the relationship between the rule of remoteness and
the mitigation concept. It seems fairly clear that in some respects the former embodies the latter. This can be seen in the prima facie rules applicable to sale of goods contracts.209 These rules rely on a comparison of market price and contract price and assume that the plaintiff will (or should) mitigate loss by going into the market.210 It is therefore hardly surprising that in some cases the result achieved under remoteness may be obtained by reference to mitigation (and vice versa). This process may explain the decision of the High Court in Burns v MAN Automotive (Aust) Pty Ltd.211 The defendant sold a prime mover to a [page 842] finance company, having warranted to the plaintiff that the vehicle’s engine had previously been reconditioned. It knew that the plaintiff would acquire the vehicle and use it in an interstate haulage business and should also have known that the plaintiff was not financially well off. Unfortunately, the vehicle had not been reconditioned. Although in June 1978 the plaintiff realised that the vehicle could not be used for the purpose intended, he continued to use it for carriage in Queensland. The breach of warranty caused the plaintiff loss, principally by reason of carrying on an unprofitable business. In fact, the plaintiff was unable to keep up the payments to the finance company and the vehicle was repossessed at the end of 1979. We need only be concerned with the claim for lost profits which (from the date of contract until July 1981) were assessed at $131,000. The Full Court of the Supreme Court of Queensland allowed $34,000 for lost profits in the period to June 1978, but held that lost profits could not be recovered after July 1978. Although this decision was affirmed by a majority of the High Court, conflicting views were expressed on whether the reduction was justified by mitigation or remoteness. It was said that the plaintiff was not ‘locked in’ to an unprofitable business, since he was not compelled to go on losing money. The problem for the plaintiff, however, was that he did not have sufficient funds to have the vehicle reconditioned, or to purchase a replacement. Wilson, Deane and Dawson JJ, in a joint judgment, said that loss of profits after June 1978 was too remote. They emphasised the need to identify the point in time beyond which the plaintiff’s claim had to be regarded as too remote. In their view the plaintiff’s loss crystallised in July 1978 and the plaintiff was not entitled to recover beyond that time.
On the other hand, Gibbs CJ said that the plaintiff should have mitigated his loss by terminating the agreement. He did not consider the plaintiff’s impecuniosity a shield from the mitigation principles. However, he took the view that because the defendant’s breach was the very reason why the plaintiff had insufficient funds, it would have been wrong to deny his claim by reference to that lack of funds. Gibbs CJ said that, allowing four years as the effective life of a reconditioned vehicle, losses beyond June 1978 could not be recovered because it was unreasonable to continue using the vehicle at a loss.212
Sale of Goods [35-38] Breach of warranty. Section 54 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW)213 deals with the damages recoverable by a buyer for breach of warranty on the part of the seller. Section 54(2) reproduces the first limb of [page 843] the rule in Hadley v Baxendale214 by stating: ‘The measure of damages for breach of warranty is the estimated loss directly and naturally resulting in the ordinary course of events from the breach of warranty’. Section 54(3) provides further guidance. This states as a prima facie measure of damages applicable to breach of a warranty of quality, ‘the difference between the value of the goods at the time of delivery to the buyer and the value they would have had if they had answered to the warranty’. Therefore, at least in a case of a breach of warranty of quality, only if the prima facie rule does not give a satisfactory result need there be a general consideration of the first limb of the rule in Hadley v Baxendale. An obvious example where the prima facie measure will not usually apply is where the breach of warranty causes physical injury to the plaintiff.215 And, treating the breach in H Parsons (Livestock) Ltd v Uttley Ingham & Co Ltd216 as a breach of warranty of quality, the case illustrates the rejection of the prima facie rule in a case of damage to a plaintiff’s property.217 Section 54(1) applies to the breach of a term classified by construction (or implication) as a warranty. It also applies to the breach of a term classified as a condition if the buyer has accepted the goods or otherwise lost the right to reject
them. It similarly applies to breach by the seller of an intermediate term if there is no right to reject, or the right of rejection has been lost. However, as an alternative to maintaining an action for damages, the buyer is entitled, by virtue of s 54(1)(a), to set up the seller’s breach in ‘diminution or extinction’ of the price of the goods if this has not been paid.218 Section 54 is not concerned with cases where the buyer has validly rejected the goods, because the buyer is then entitled to damages for nondelivery. [35-39] Delay in acceptance. Section 40 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW)219 applies where a buyer is guilty of delay in accepting goods. It provides that the buyer is liable where a seller is ready and willing to make delivery, and requests the buyer to take the goods, but the buyer fails to take delivery of the goods within a reasonable time. The buyer is liable ‘for any loss occasioned’ by the ‘neglect or refusal to take delivery’. The seller is also entitled to recover a ‘reasonable charge for the care and custody of the goods’. Section 40 is concerned with situations in which the goods are delivered, albeit late. If the buyer has wrongly refused to accept the goods, the seller [page 844] will be entitled to terminate the contract and claim damages for nonacceptance. [35-40] Non-acceptance. Under s 52 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW),220 where a buyer wrongfully neglects or refuses to accept and pay for goods, the seller may maintain an action for non-acceptance. Section 52(2) provides a general rule that the measure of damages is the estimated loss directly and naturally resulting in the ordinary course of events from the buyer’s breach of contract. This is, of course, the first limb of the rule in Hadley v Baxendale.221 However, s 52(3) states a prima facie measure, applicable where there is an available market222 for the goods in question. This measure is ‘the difference between the contract price and the market or current price at the time or times when the goods ought to have been accepted, or if no time was fixed for acceptance, then at the time of the refusal to accept’. Thus, in cases where there is an available market the prima facie measure will apply. If, for example, A agrees to sell B 100 tonnes of wheat at $100 per tonne, but B refuses to take delivery, A’s damages will be assessed as the difference between the contract price ($100) and the market price. Assuming that the market price is only $90
per tonne, A will be entitled to recover $1000 ($10 x 100). If, however, the market price of the goods has risen, or remained constant, because A can go into the market and sell for a higher price than B agreed to pay, or the same price, A will be restricted to a claim for transaction costs. In cases where there is no available market, or the prima facie rule is not, in the circumstances, a satisfactory rule to apply, the court must apply s 52(2). If, for example, a seller wishes to recover loss of profit on the sale, the seller must displace the prima facie rule. Thus, in W L Thompson Ltd v Robinson (Gunmakers) Ltd223 a seller of a new motor car was able to recover the profit lost on the sale to the defendant, when he refused to accept the vehicle, because the demand for new cars of that type was exceeded by supply. On the other hand, the seller’s claim failed in Charter v Sullivan,224 where demand exceeded supply. In Thompson the seller was regarded as having lost the opportunity to make an extra sale, since there were fewer customers than cars. However, in Charter the seller suffered no loss because there were more customers than cars to sell. Where the goods are second-hand, supply and demand are generally irrelevant because each item is regarded as unique. Thus, if a buyer of a second-hand motor car refuses to accept delivery, and the seller resells the car at a profit, the seller will be restricted to the recovery of a nominal sum (or transaction costs) from the original buyer.225 [page 845] [35-41] Late delivery.Usually, where a seller tenders goods after the time appointed by the contract, the buyer is under no obligation to accept the goods, time of delivery being of the essence in commercial contracts at least.226 But what if time is not essential, or if the seller decides to accept the goods so as to be able, for example, to honour a contract with a third party? In Wertheim v Chicoutimi Pulp Co227 a contract between the plaintiff and the defendants provided for the delivery of 3000 tons of wood pulp. The defendants were manufacturers of wood pulp and agreed to make delivery, at Chicoutimi, between 1 September and 1 November 1900. Delivery was delayed until June 1901 and the plaintiffs claimed to recover the difference between the market price of the goods at Manchester (which was the ultimate destination of the goods) at the time when the pulp ought to have been delivered and when in fact
it was delivered. The Privy Council held that this sum could be recovered but that the plaintiff had to give credit for the price received under subcontracts. As Wertheim’s case illustrates, the prima facie rule in the case of late delivery is the difference between the market price of the goods at the time and place of actual delivery and the market price when the goods ought to have been delivered.228 [35-42] Non-delivery. Section 53 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW)229 provides that the buyer may claim damages for non-delivery where the seller fails to deliver the goods. The provisions parallel those applicable to cases of non-acceptance. Thus, s 53(2) provides a general rule that the measure of damages is the ‘estimated loss directly and naturally resulting in the ordinary course of events from the seller’s breach of contract’. This is the first limb of the rule in Hadley v Baxendale.230 Section 53(3) then states a prima facie measure, applicable where there is an available market231 for the goods. The measure is the ‘difference between the contract price and the market or current price of the goods at the time or times when they ought to have been delivered, or if no time was fixed, then at the time of the refusal to deliver’. Where the prima facie rule applies, the calculation of damages is relatively straightforward. For example, if A agrees to sell 100 tonnes of corn to B at a price of $100 per tonne, but A refuses to deliver the goods, B’s damages are represented by the difference between the contract price ($100) and the market price at the time stipulated for delivery, or if no time was fixed, at the time of A’s refusal. Therefore, if the market price is $110, B recovers $1000 ($10 x 100). However, if the market price is $100 or less, B will be restricted to transaction costs. [page 846] The prima facie rule may be displaced by the circumstances of the case, or there may be no available market. In either case the court must apply s 53(2). For example, in Hasell v Bagot Shakes & Lewis Ltd232 the plaintiff agreed to sell a quantity of Japanese superphosphates to the defendants at a price of 71s 6d per ton. Some 3000 tons were not delivered and the defendants claimed damages. There was no market for the goods and Griffith CJ stated233 that the court was required to ascertain ‘what a reasonable man, acting sensibly on his own behalf and at his own risk, would be willing to pay in order to get the goods at the place
and at the time stipulated’. He went on to explain that this amount was to be ascertained by taking the price at the place of manufacture or other source, together with the cost of carriage and a reasonable sum for the profit of the importer. The plaintiff had purchased goods through an importer at 78s when the market price of superphosphates in Japan was about 72s 10d. An issue could have been raised as to whether the plaintiff had allowed the importer too much profit, but it was not, and the court accepted the difference between the price paid and the contract price as the appropriate measure of the plaintiff’s loss. [35-43] Available market concept. The concept of an ‘available market’ for goods is relevant to both non-acceptance and non-delivery. In Francis v Lyon234 Griffith CJ said that he understood the term to mean that the ‘circumstances, including conditions of time and place, are such that a purchaser having money in his hands can, then and there, if he so desires, buy other goods of the same quality’. To this must be added a requirement that the goods be of the same description. From the seller’s perspective, for there to be an available market the circumstances must be such that the seller can sell goods of the description and quality provided for by the contract. There is probably no available market for second-hand goods,235 because none of the other goods available will be of the same quality and description. It has also been doubted whether there is an available market where the retail price of goods is fixed,236 for example, by government regulations, because the price of the goods is not regulated by market forces. [35-44] Special damages. Section 55237 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW) preserves the right of a buyer or seller to recover ‘special’ damages where these would be recoverable. This allows recovery of damages under the second limb of the rule in Hadley v Baxendale.238 1.
Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827 at 849.
2.
See Tilbury, Civil Remedies, 1990, Vol 1, paras 1002-4. See also [32-05] and further [38-02], [38-26].
3.
See [14-22]–[14-25].
4.
See [37-07]–[37-17].
5.
See Chapter 24.
6.
See F M B Reynolds, ‘Discharge by Breach as a Remedy’, in Finn, ed, Essays on Contract, 1987, p 183; J W Carter and M J Tilbury, ‘Remedial Choice and Contract Drafting’ (1998) 13 JCL 5. Cf S M Waddams, ‘Remedies as a Legal Subject’ (1983) 3 OJLS 113.
7.
The conduct may also amount to breach of the statutory prohibition on misleading and deceptive conduct. See generally Chapter 19.
8.
Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd (1938) 61 CLR 286 at 300. Nevertheless,
termination may affect the quantification of damages. See [36-13]–[36-17]. 9.
Ogle v Comboyuro Investments Pty Ltd (1976) 136 CLR 444 at 450; 9 ALR 309.
10.
Huppert v Stock Options of Australia Pty Ltd (1965) 112 CLR 414.
11.
See [35-42].
12.
See [34-07].
13.
Whitfeld v De Lauret & Co Ltd (1920) 29 CLR 71 at 80; Johnson v Perez (1988) 166 CLR 351 at 355, 386; 82 ALR 587; Ruxley Electronics and Constructions Ltd v Forsyth [1996] AC 344.
14.
Butler v Fairclough (1917) 23 CLR 78 at 89 per Griffith CJ (approved Gray v Motor Accident Commission (formerly State Government Insurance Commission) (1998) 196 CLR 1 at 6; 158 ALR 485).
15.
[1909] AC 488. Cf Malik v Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA [1998] AC 20 (financial loss arising from breach of an implied obligation of trust and confidence). Contrast Burazin v Blacktown City Guardian Pty Ltd (1997) 142 ALR 144 (statutory provision permitted award for shock, humiliation and distress suffered by employee following wrongful dismissal).
16.
For a list of the categories see Gray v Motor Accident Commission (formerly State Government Insurance Commission) (1998) 196 CLR 1 at 27-8 (see Jane Swanton and Barbara McDonald (1999) 73 ALJ 402).
17.
See also Harris v Digital Pulse Pty Ltd (2003) 56 NSWLR 298 (even if the contractual relationship is fiduciary); Johnson v Unisys Ltd [2003] 1 AC 518 at 530. See further [36-08].
18.
[2001] 1 AC 268. See further [35-07], [35-12], [38-29].
19.
Monarch SS Co Ltd v A/B Karlshamns Oljefabriker [1949] AC 196 at 220; Wenham v Ella (1972) 127 CLR 454 at 466; Johnson v Perez (1988) 166 CLR 351 at 355, 371.
20.
Robinson v Harman (1848) 1 Ex 850 at 855; 154 ER 363 at 365 per Parke B (approved Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64 at 80, 98, 117, 134, 148, 161; 104 ALR 1).
21.
See [18-69]. See also Marks (in a Representative Capacity) v GIO Australia Holdings Ltd (1998) 196 CLR 494; 158 ALR 333 (expectation damages are not generally available for breach of the statutory prohibition on misleading or deceptive conduct).
22.
Addis v Gramophone Co Ltd [1909] AC 488 at 498.
23.
[1969] 1 AC 350. See also Astley v Austrust Ltd (1999) 197 CLR 1 at 23, 28; 161 ALR 155; Wylie v ANI Corp Ltd (2000) [2002] 1 Qd R 320 at 335 and generally on remoteness [35-23]–[35-28].
24.
See Koufos v C Czarnikow Ltd [1969] 1 AC 350 at 411. Cf Pennant Hills Restaurants Pty Ltd v Barrell Insurances Pty Ltd (1981) 145 CLR 625 at 637; 34 ALR 162. See further [35-26].
25.
Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd (1938) 61 CLR 286.
26.
See [35-20]–[35-22].
27.
See [35-23]–[35-28].
28.
(1938) 61 CLR 286.
29.
See also Dyke v McLeish Estates Ltd (1927) 27 SR (NSW) 74; Berger v Boyles [1971] VR 321; Biotechnology Australia Pty Ltd v Pace (1988) 15 NSWLR 130 at 156.
30.
See Owners of SS ‘Mediana’ v Owners etc of Lightship ‘Comet’ [1900] AC 113 at 116 where it is pointed out, in the context of an action in tort, that ‘nominal’ is a technical expression and does not mean ‘small’. See also Baume v The Commonwealth (1906) 4 CLR 97 at 116-17.
31.
See J L R Davis, ‘Damages’ in Finn, ed, Essays on Contract, 1987, p 200; Daniel Friedmann, ‘The Performance Interest in Contract Damages’ (1995) 111 LQR 468; Brian Coote, ‘The Performance Interest, Panatown, and the Problem of Loss’ (2001) 117 LQR 81.
32.
See Tito v Waddell (No 2) [1977] Ch 106; Alucraft Pty Ltd (in liq) v Grocon Ltd (No 2) (1994) [1996] 2 VR 386 at 400-1.
33.
It is assumed that the buyer did not become the owner of the goods. See also [3507] and further [3829].
34.
See [35-12].
35.
(1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151. See Andrew Tettenborn, ‘Hadley v Baxendale Foreseeability: a Principle Beyond Its Sell-by Date?’ (2007) 23 JCL 120.
36.
European Bank Ltd v Evans of Robb Evans & Associates (2010) 240 CLR 432 at 438; 264 ALR 1 at 4; [2010] HCA 6 at [13]. See further [35-23]–[35-28].
37.
(1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151.
38.
Although the terminology of ‘special’ damages is employed in the sale of goods legislation (see [3544]) the division has been said to be more appropriate to cases of tort than cases of contract. See Ströms Bruks Aktie Bolag v Hutchison [1905] AC 515 at 525. But cf President of India v La Pintada Compania Navigacion SA [1985] AC 104 at 115.
39.
See generally M G Bridge, ‘Expectation Damages and Uncertain Future Losses’, in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995, p 427.
40.
See [35-04].
41.
See also Koufos v C Czarnikow Ltd [1969] 1 AC 350 at 414, 420; Wenham v Ella (1972) 127 CLR 454 at 471; Burns v MAN Automotive (Aust) Pty Ltd (1986) 161 CLR 653 at 667, 672; 69 ALR 11.
42.
See Marks (in a Representative Capacity) v GIO Australia Holdings Ltd (1998) 196 CLR 494 at 502.
43.
See [37-38].
44.
See further [36-14].
45.
Cf Mallick v Parish (1916) 16 SR (NSW) 305.
46.
See [35-40], [35-42].
47.
See Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64.
48.
For the case of pre-contractual expenditure see [36-01].
49.
Subject to rules preventing double recovery: [35-13].
50.
The emphasis on reliance loss in the seminal article by L L Fuller and W R Perdue, ‘The Reliance Interest in Contract Damages’ (1936, 1937) 46 Yale LJ 52 and 373 is not fully supported by Australian law. See also H K Lücke, ‘Two Types of Expectation Interest in Contract Damages’ (1989) 12 UNSWLJ 98; M A Eisenberg, ‘The Emergence of Dynamic Contract Law’ (2000) 88 California Law Review 1743; Maree Chetwin, ‘Beyond Fuller and Perdue’s Classification: Welcome Steps or Troublesome Taxonomy?’ (2010) 26 JCL 271.
51.
(1951) 84 CLR 377.
52.
See [20-10].
53.
(1951) 84 CLR 377 at 412.
54.
Cf C & P Haulage v Middleton [1983] 1 WLR 1461 (see A S Burrows (1984) 100 LQR 27).
55.
(1991) 174 CLR 64 (see G H Treitel (1992) 108 LQR 226). See also S M Waddams, ‘Damages: Assessment of Uncertainties’ (1998) 13 JCL 55; Nick Seddon, ‘Contract Damages Where Both
Parties Are at Fault’ (2000) 15 JCL 207 where Amann is discussed from broader perspectives. 56.
See generally [36-19]–[36-20].
57.
This was also the position in McRae’s case where, because there was no tanker in existence, it was impossible to prove the plaintiffs would not have recouped their expenditure. See also Goldburg v Shell Oil Co of Australia Ltd (1990) 95 ALR 711 at 720. Cf CCC Films (London) Ltd v Impact Quadrant Films Ltd [1985] QB 16.
58.
(1874) LR 7 HL 158. See [36-21]–[36-22].
59.
See [28-10].
60.
See Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v Watson (1946) 72 CLR 435 at 451, 452, 461, 465, 476.
61.
See, eg Aerial Advertising Co v Batchelors Peas Ltd (Manchester) [1938] 2 All ER 788.
62.
See, eg CCC Films (London) Ltd v Impact Quadrant Films Ltd [1985] QB 16.
63.
See [38-06].
64.
See [38-29]. See also [35-07], [35-12].
65.
Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64.
66.
Cf Stocznia Gdynia SA v Gearbulk Holdings Ltd [2010] 1 QB 27; [2009] EWCA Civ 75 (claim against guarantor and seller).
67.
[1954] 1 QB 292.
68.
(1963) 180 CLR 130. See also Wenham v Ella (1972) 127 CLR 454 at 463-4, 465-6, 473.
69.
See also (1963) 180 CLR 130 at 141.
70.
See S M Waddams, ‘The Date for the Assessment of Damages’ (1981) 97 LQR 445.
71.
See Johnson v Perez (1988) 166 CLR 351 at 355, 367, 370, 380, 386.
72.
See, eg Wenham v Ella (1972) 127 CLR 454 at 473; Smith New Court Securities Ltd v Citibank NA [1997] AC 254 at 265, 284. For application to cases of anticipatory breach see [36-04], [36-14].
73.
See [35-42].
74.
See [36-24].
75.
See Johnson v Perez (1988) 166 CLR 351 at 355-6.
76.
At least in cases of negligence: Johnson v Perez (1988) 166 CLR 351.
77.
[1980] AC 367 at 401. See also Johnson v Perez (1988) 166 CLR 351 at 386-9; Alcoa Minerals of Jamaica Inc v Broderick [2002] 1 AC 371 at 378.
78.
[1978] 1 All ER 33. See also Miliangos v George Frank (Textiles) Ltd [1976] AC 443 (foreign currency award); Johnson v Perez (1988) 166 CLR 351 at 357-8, 386.
79.
See further [36-12].
80.
[1978] 1 All ER 33 at 56-7. See generally on mitigation [35-33]–[35-37].
81.
Mann v Capital Territory Health Commission (1982) 148 CLR 97; 42 ALR 46.
82.
De Soysa v De Pless Pol [1912] AC 194. See generally [36-13]–[36-17].
83.
See [36-16].
84.
Moschi v Lep Air Services Ltd [1973] AC 331.
85.
See further [35-18], [36-19]–[36-20].
86.
Fink v Fink (1946) 74 CLR 127 at 143.
87.
See [35-06].
88.
Aerial Advertising Co v Batchelors Peas Ltd (Manchester) [1938] 2 All ER 788.
89.
(1951) 84 CLR 377 (see [35-11]).
90.
See [35-33]–[35-37].
91.
Bennett v Minister for Community Welfare (1992) 176 CLR 408 at 412-13; 107 ALR 617. Cf Environment Agency (formerly National Rivers Authority) v Empress Car Co (Abertillery) Ltd [1999] 2 AC 22 at 30-2 (scope of the relevant duty must first be identified).
92.
[1949] AC 196 at 227 per Lord Wright.
93.
Monarch SS Co Ltd v A/B Karlshamns Oljefabriker [1949] AC 196 at 228. See also Alexander v Cambridge Credit Corp Ltd (1987) 9 NSWLR 310 at 315, 350, 351.
94.
March v E & M H Stramare Pty Ltd (1991) 171 CLR 506 at 522; 99 ALR 423.
95.
The onus is on the plaintiff: Wilsher v Essex Area Health Authority [1988] AC 1074.
96.
(1968) 120 CLR 516.
97.
Smith New Court Securities v Citibank NA [1997] AC 254 at 284-5; Chappel v Hart (1998) 195 CLR 232 at 255; 156 ALR 517 at 534; Kenny & Good Pty Ltd v MGICA (1992) Ltd (1999) 199 CLR 413 at 426; 163 ALR 611 at 619.
98.
See March v E & M H Stramare Pty Ltd (1991) 171 CLR 506.
99.
See [35-21], [35-22].
100. Simonius Vischer & Co v Holt [1979] 2 NSWLR 322 at 346; Henville v Walker (2001) 206 CLR 459 at 482; 182 ALR 37 at 50. 101. Monarch SS Co Ltd v A/B Karlshamns Oljefabriker [1949] AC 196 at 227. 102. Alexander v Cambridge Credit Corp (1987) 9 NSWLR 310 at 352. 103. See, eg Simonius Vischer & Co v Holt [1979] 2 NSWLR 322 at 346; Alexander v Cambridge Credit Corp (1987) 9 NSWLR 310 at 315, 353-8. 104. See, eg Unity Insurance Brokers Pty Ltd v Rocco Pezzano Pty Ltd (1998) 192 CLR 603 at 607, 612, 650-1; 154 ALR 361 at 363, 367, 397-8. 105. Cf Alexander v Cambridge Credit Corp Ltd (1987) 9 NSWLR 310 (auditors of the plaintiff not responsible for downturn in the property market caused by economic conditions). 106. See, eg Burns v MAN Automotive (Aust) Pty Ltd (1986) 161 CLR 653 at 658, 674-5. In Owners of the Dredger Liesbosch v Owners of SS Edison [1933] AC 449 the plaintiffs’ financial embarrassment was treated as an independent cause of their loss which could not be the subject of compensation. See Brian Coote, ‘Damages, The Liesbosch and Impecuniosity’ [2001] CLJ 511. However, that aspect of the decision was departed from in Lagden v O’Connor [2004] 1 AC 1067. Cf Monarch SS Co Ltd v A/B Karlshamns Oliefabriker [1949] AC 196 at 224. 107. [1982] AC 225. Cf Quinn v Burch Bros (Builders) Ltd [1966] 2 QB 370. 108. [1949] AC 196. 109. See, eg Commonwealth Trading Bank of Australia v Sydney Wide Stores Pty Ltd (1981) 148 CLR 304; 35 ALR 513. See also March v E & M H Stramare Pty Ltd (1991) 171 CLR 506 (tort); Reeves v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis [2000] 1 AC 360 at 367, 374-5. But cf Medlin v State Government Insurance Commission (1995) 182 CLR 1 at 6; 127 ALR 180 at 183. 110. See Francis Dawson, ‘Reflections on Certain Aspects of the Law of Damages for breach of Contract’ (1995) 9 JCL 125.
111. Cf H Parsons (Livestock) Ltd v Uttley Ingham & Co Ltd [1978] QB 791 at 801. 112. See Burns v MAN Automotive (Aust) Pty Ltd (1986) 161 CLR 653 at 675; Malik v Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA [1998] AC 20 at 49-50. 113. (1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151 (see [35-08]). 114. Koufos v C Czarnikow Ltd [1969] 1 AC 350 at 416. 115. (1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151 (see [35-08]). 116. [1949] AC 196 at 233. 117. [1949] AC 196 at 235. 118. [1949] 2 KB 528 at 539, 540. 119. [1969] 1 AC 350. 120. See further [35-26]. 121. [1969] 1 AC 350 at 388. 122. [1969] 1 AC 350 at 406. 123. [1969] 1 AC 350 at 410-11. 124. [1969] 1 AC 350 at 415. 125. [1969] 1 AC 350 at 425. 126. See, eg Wenham v Ella (1972) 127 CLR 454 at 471-2; Burns v MAN Automotive (Aust) Pty Ltd (1986) 161 CLR 653 at 667; National Australia Bank Ltd v Nemur Varity Pty Ltd (2002) 4 VR 252 at 270; Tilbury, Civil Remedies, 1990, Vol 1, para 3077. See also Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1993) 176 CLR 344 at 365, 368, 370; 111 ALR 289. 127. See also Astley v Austrust Ltd (1999) 197 CLR 1 at 23, 28. But see [35-26]. 128. (1854) 9 Ex 341; 156 ER 145. 129. See generally [35-38]–[35-44]. 130. [1969] 1 AC 350. 131. See [35-41]. 132. [2009] 1 AC 61; [2008] UKHL 48. 133. [2007] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 19; [2006] EWHC 3030 (Comm). 134. [2007] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 555; [2007] EWCA Civ 901. 135. [2009] 1 AC 61 at 68; [2008] UKHL 48 at [15]. Lord Walker agreed. 136. [2009] 1 AC 61 at 70; [2008] UKHL 48 at [22]. 137. [2009] 1 AC 61 at 71; [2008] UKHL 48 at [23]. See also [2009] 1 AC 61 at 71; [2008] UKHL 48 at [26]. 138. See Adam Kramer, ‘The New Test of Remoteness in Contract’ (2009) 125 LQR 408; Brian Coote, ‘Contract as Assumption and Remoteness of Damage’ (2010) 26 JCL 211. See also Janet O’Sullivan, [2009] CLJ 34. 139. See, eg Supershield Ltd v Siemens Building Technologies FE Ltd [2010] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 349 at 355-6; [2010] EWCA Civ 7 at [40]-[43]. 140. See [35-24]. 141. See [35-04].
142. [1978] QB 791. 143. [1969] 1 AC 350 (see [35-04]). 144. [1978] QB 791 at 803. 145. Applying Hughes v Lord Advocate [1963] AC 837 (liability in tort for burns suffered by plaintiff where the defendant could foresee type of injury suffered, even though the injury was caused by an unforeseeable event). 146. [1978] QB 791 at 806. 147. [1978] QB 791 at 807. 148. [1978] QB 791 at 811. 149. See also Alexander v Cambridge Credit Corp Ltd (1987) 9 NSWLR 310 at 365-6. 150. (1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151 (see [35-08]). 151. (1951) 84 CLR 377 (see [35-11]). 152. [1949] 2 KB 528. 153. [1949] 2 KB 528 at 543. 154. (1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151 (see [35-08]). 155. See British Columbia etc Saw-Mill Co Ltd v Nettleship (1868) LR 3 CP 499 at 509. 156. See, eg Koufos v C Czarnikow Ltd [1969] 1 AC 350 at 422. 157. Provided it is not a penalty the parties may agree in advance the sum to be recoverable on breach. See further [37-07]–[37-17]. 158. Robophone Facilities Ltd v Blank [1966] 1 WLR 1428 at 1448. 159. (1913) 17 CLR 82. 160. See [14-22]–[14-25]. 161. See Astley v Austrust Ltd (1999) 197 CLR 1. 162. See [35-22]. 163. [1982] AC 225 (see [35-22]). 164. For the legislation see [35-30]. 165. (1999) 197 CLR 1 (see Jane Swanton and Barbara McDonald (1999) 73 ALJ 541; Jane Swanton (1999) 14 JCL 251). See generally Michael Tilbury and J W Carter, ‘Converging Liabilities and Security of Contract: Contributory Negligence in Australian Law’ (2000) 16 JCL 78. See also Scott v Davis (2000) 204 CLR 333 at 422; 175 ALR 217 at 285. 166. See N E Palmer and P J Davies, ‘Contributory Negligence and Breach of Contract — English and Australasian Attitudes Compared’ (1980) 29 ICLQ 415; Jane Swanton, ‘Contributory Negligence as a Defence to Actions for Breach of Contract’ (1981) 55 ALJ 278. 167. See: ACT: Civil Law (Property) Act 2006, Pt 2.6; NSW: Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1965; NT: Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1956; Qld: Law Reform Act 1995; SA: Law Reform (Contributory Negligence and Apportionment of Liability) Act 2001; Tas: Wrongs Act 1954; Vic:Wrongs Act 1958; WA: Law Reform (Contributory Negligence and Tortfeasors’ Contribution) Act 1947. 168. See also ACT: Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002, s 41(1); NT: Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1956, s 16; Qld: Law Reform Act 1995, s 10(1); SA: Law Reform (Contributory Negligence and Apportionment of Liability) Act 2001, s 7; Tas: Wrongs Act 1954, s 4; Vic: Wrongs Act 1958, s 26(1);
WA: Law Reform (Contributory Negligence and Tortfeasors’ Contribution) Act 1947, s 4(1). 169. See also ACT: Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002, s 40; NT: Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1956, s 15; Qld: Law Reform Act 1995, s 5; SA: Law Reform (Contributory Negligence and Apportionment of Liability) Act 2001, s 3; Tas:Wrongs Act 1954, s 2; Vic:Wrongs Act 1958, s 25; WA: Law Reform (Contributory Negligence and Tortfeasors’ Contribution) Act 1947, s 3A (‘claim or action founded on or resulting from negligence’). 170. See further [35-31]. 171. [1972] 2 NSWLR 395 at 399. 172. See further [35-31], [35-32]. 173. See ACT: Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002, s 41(4); NSW: Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1965, s 9(2) NT: Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1956, s 16(2); Qld: Law Reform Act 1995, s 10(2); SA: Law Reform (Contributory Negligence and Apportionment of Liability) Act 2001, s 7(3); Tas: Tortfeasors and Contributory Negligence Act 1954, s 4(1)(a); Vic: Wrongs Act 1958, s 26(1A); WA: Law Reform (Contributory Negligence and Tortfeasors’ Contribution) Act 1947, s 4(1) (a) (proviso). 174. See ACT: Civil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002, s 41(3); NSW: Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1965, s 9(3); NT: Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1956, s 16(2A); Qld: Law Reform Act 1995, s 10(2A); SA: Law Reform (Contributory Negligence and Apportionment of Liability) Act 2001, s 7(3); Tas: Tortfeasors and Contributory Negligence Act 1954, s 4(1)(b); Vic: Wrongs Act 1958, s 26(1B); WA: Law Reform (Contributory Negligence and Tortfeasors’ Contribution) Act 1947, s 4(1)(b). 175. For the provisions see [35-30]. 176. Sometimes termed ‘negligent breach of contract’, an expression which has, however, been criticised; see Quinn v Burch Bros (Builders) Ltd [1966] 2 QB 370 at 378, 379; Read v Nerey Nominees Pty Ltd [1979] VR 47 at 51. 177. (1999) 197 CLR 1. 178. See, eg Queen’s Bridge Motors and Engineering Co Pty Ltd v Edwards [1964] Tas SR 93 (repairer); Forsikringsaktieselskapet Vesta v Butcher [1989] AC 852 at 858ff, affirmed by the House of Lords without reference to the point (quantity surveyor). 179. Groom v Crocker [1939] 1 KB 194. 180. See, eg Swain v The Law Society [1982] 1 WLR 17; Macpherson v Kevin J Prunty & Associates [1983] VR 573; Brickhill v Cooke [1984] 3 NSWLR 396 at 400-1; Johnson v Perez (1988) 166 CLR 351 at 363. See also on concurrent duties [11-16], [29-17]. 181. See generally [29-16]. 182. See, eg A S James Pty Ltd v Duncan [1970] VR 705; Basildon DC v J E Lesser (Properties) Ltd [1985] QB 839 (see A S Burrows (1985) 101 LQR 161); Barclays Bank Plc v Fairclough Building Ltd [1995] QB 214 (see C A Hopkins [1995] CLJ 21). 183. Cf Quinn v Burch Bros (Builders) Ltd [1966] 2 QB 370 at 379 (affirmed at 381); Barclays Bank Plc v Fairclough Building Ltd [1995] QB 214. 184. See O’Connor v BDB Kirby & Co [1972] 1 QB 90. See also [35-22], [35-29]. 185. Roper v Johnson (1873) LR 8 CP 167; TC Industrial Plant Pty Ltd v Robert’s Queens-land Pty Ltd (1963) 180 CLR 130 at 138; Metal Fabrications (Vic) Pty Ltd v Kelcey [1986] VR 507; Tasman Capital Pty Ltd v Sinclair (2008) 75 NSWLR 1 at 8; [2008] NSWCA 248 at [72]. 186. See, eg Lucy v The Commonwealth (1923) 33 CLR 229; Tasman Capital Pty Ltd v Sinclair (2008) 75 NSWLR 1 at 3; [2008] NSWCA 248 at [55].
187. [1967] 1 QB 278. 188. [1967] 1 QB 278 at 290. Contrast Levison v Farin [1978] 2 All ER 1149. 189. [1912] AC 673. See also Gardner v Marsh & Parsons (a firm) [1997] 1 WLR 489. 190. Westwood v Secretary of State for Employment [1985] AC 20 at 44. Cf Hoad v Scone Motors Pty Ltd [1977] 1 NSWLR 88 (tort). 191. See TCN Channel 9 Pty Ltd v Hayden Enterprises Pty Ltd (1989) 16 NSWLR 130 at 162. Contrast the position where there is an express term requiring mitigation. See Stocznia Gdanska SA v Latvian Shipping Co [1998] 1 WLR 574. 192. Sotiros Shipping Inc v Sameiet Solholt (The Solholt) [1983] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 605 at 608. But cf Falko v James McEwan & Co Pty Ltd [1977] VR 447 at 452. 193. See Empresa Cubana Importada de Alimentos ‘Alimport’ v Iasmos Shipping Co SA (The Good Friend) [1984] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 586 at 597. 194. See Kaines (UK) Ltd v Osterreichische Warrenhandelsgesellschaf Austrowaren Gesellschaft mbH [1993] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 1 at 10 per Bingham LJ. 195. See [36-05]. 196. [1960] 1 WLR 1038. See also Challenge Bank Ltd v V L Cooper & Associates Pty Ltd [1996] 1 VR 220 at 232. 197. [1960] 1 WLR 1038 at 1049. 198. [1895] 2 QB 253. 199. James Finlay & Co Ltd v NV Kwik Hoo Tong Handel Maatschappij [1929] 1 KB 400; Metal Fabrications (Vic) Pty Ltd v Kelcey [1986] VR 507. 200. (1915) 20 CLR 285. 201. (1915) 20 CLR 285 at 296. 202. [1932] AC 452. See John Tillotson, ‘The Portuguese Bank Note Case: Legal, Economic and Financial Approaches to the Measure of Damages in Contract’ (1994) 68 ALJ 93. 203. See also Simonius Vischer & Co v Holt [1979] 2 NSWLR 322 at 355-6; London and South of England Building Society v Stone [1983] 1 WLR 1242 at 1263. 204. See further [36-05]. 205. [1960] 1 WLR 1038 (see [35-35]). 206. See, eg Sotiros Shipping Inc v Sameiet Solholt (The Solholt) [1983] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 605 and further [36-05]. 207. White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor [1962] AC 413. 208. White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor [1962] AC 413. See further [3718]-[37-24]. 209. See [35-40], [35-42]. 210. Cf Hussey v Eels [1990] 2 QB 227 at 233. 211. (1986) 161 CLR 653 (see Robyn Carrol (1989) 2 JCL 171). Cf Platform Home Loans Ltd v Oyston Shipways Ltd [2000] 2 AC 190 at 208 (contributory negligence and causation). 212. Brennan J, who dissented, and would have remitted the case for reassessment of damages, said that remoteness expresses the same limitation as mitigation where an act on the part of the plaintiff is needed to put an end to the losses resulting from breach of warranty. In his view neither mitigation nor remoteness operated to restrict the plaintiff to profits lost prior to July 1978.
213. For corresponding provisions see ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 56; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 54; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 54; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 52; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896 s 57; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 59; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 52. 214. (1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151 (see [35-08]). 215. Andrews v Hopkinson [1957] 1 QB 229. 216. [1978] QB 791 (see [35-26]). 217. Cf Bostock & Co Ltd v Nicholson & Sons Ltd [1904] 1 KB 725. 218. See also s 54(4) (further damage). 219. For corresponding provisions see ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 41; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 40; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 39; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 37; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 42; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 44; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 37. 220. For corresponding provisions see ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 53; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 52; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 51; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 49; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 54; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 56; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 49. 221. (1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151 (see [35-08]). 222. See [35-43]. 223. [1955] Ch 177. 224. [1957] 2 QB 117. See also Shearson Lehman Hutton Inc v Maclaine Watson & Co Ltd (No 2) [1990] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 441. 225. Lazenby Garages Ltd v Wright [1976] 2 All ER 770. 226. See [30-52]. 227. [1911] AC 301. See also Linnett Bay Shipping Co Ltd v Patraicos Gulf Shipping Co SA (The Al Tawfiq) [1984] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 598. 228. However, the deduction made in respect of the plaintiff’s subcontracts has been criticised. See Benjamin’s Sale of Goods, 6th ed, 2002, para 17-38. 229. For corresponding provisions see ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 54; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 53; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 52; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 50; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 55; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 57; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 50. 230. (1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151 (see [35-08]). 231. See [35-43]. 232. (1911) 13 CLR 374. 233. (1911) 13 CLR 374 at 381. 234. (1907) 4 CLR 1023 at 1036. 235. Lazenby Garages Ltd v Wright [1976] 2 All ER 770. 236. Charter v Sullivan [1957] 2 QB 117. 237. For corresponding provisions see ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 57; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 55; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 55; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 53; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 58; Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 60; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 53. 238. (1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151 (see [35-08]). See generally [35-27]–[35-8].
[page 847]
Chapter 36
Particular Issues in Contract Damages [36-01] Pre-contract expenditure. Normally, expenditure incurred prior to the contract being entered into is not recoverable by a plaintiff as a distinct head of damages. Of course, damages do frequently compensate the plaintiff for expenditure incurred before the contract is entered into. For example, where a purchaser of land receives damages to cover expenses in investigating title and executing the contract there is an element of pre-contract expenditure in the award. But it is exceptional for pre-contract expenditure to be the main basis for assessment. That damages in respect of pre-contract expenditure are sometimes recoverable is illustrated by Anglia Television Ltd v Reed.1 The defendant agreed to play the leading role in a play which the plaintiffs intended to produce for television. However, a few days later he repudiated his obligations and the plaintiffs brought an action for damages. Because the plaintiffs had no way of estimating the profit they would have made on the production, they claimed instead the money they had spent on the production. Their claim (£2750) was made up, in part, of director’s and designer’s fees and so on, incurred prior to the contract being entered into. The basis for claiming this pre-contract expenditure was that the defendant’s breach had caused the benefit of such expenditure to be lost. The English Court of Appeal held that the £2750 was recoverable because it was in the contemplation of the parties as likely to be lost if the contract was not performed. On the facts it does not appear that the defendant actually knew that the expenditure was likely to be lost, but the court said that such knowledge could reasonably be imputed to him. Two features of Anglia Television v Reed require explanation.2 First, was the court justified in imputing to the defendant knowledge that if his contract was not performed the whole production would be cancelled? The basis for saying
that it was justified is that he contracted to play the leading role and must have known that it would be very difficult, if not impossible, for the plaintiffs to replace him at short notice. As against this, the court was applying the second limb of the rule in Hadley v Baxendale3 and actual knowledge is generally taken to be the basis for its application. [page 848] Second, there appears to have been no evidence before the court that the expenditure incurred would have been recouped, either in whole or in part, had the production gone ahead. Nevertheless, the court was entitled to assume, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the play would have brought in revenue, if not necessarily profit.4
Anticipatory Breach [36-02] Termination required. For a plaintiff’s cause of action to be complete in cases of anticipatory breach the obligation of the parties to perform must have been terminated.5 Therefore, it is essential for a plaintiff who claims damages for anticipatory breach to prove that performance has been validly terminated.6 [36-03] Problems created by anticipatory breach. The assessment of damages in cases of anticipatory breach creates a number of problems: determining the impact of termination of the contract on damages assessment;7 determining the date at which damages are to be assessed;8 applying mitigation principles;9 and dealing with the fact that the plaintiff may recover damages prior to performance by the defendant falling due.10 To a large extent these problems arise because of the way the law interprets the plaintiff’s cause of action, namely, as damages for what is conceived of as an ‘inevitable’ breach.11 In cases where the breach is wholly anticipatory the court must treat the defendant’s breach by nonperformance as inevitable and assess damages without necessarily having all the information required to assess the plaintiff’s loss accurately. [36-04] Date for assessment. Application of the general rule,12 that damages are
assessed at the time of breach, gives rise to two possible dates: the date of the plaintiff’s election to terminate; and the date fixed in the contract for performance by the defendant. Although in one sense the defendant’s breach occurs at the time of termination by the plaintiff, the plaintiff’s cause of action arises in respect of obligations which would have been due for performance at a later date.13 The later date is generally chosen as the date for assessment because choice [page 849] of the earlier date would, in effect, accelerate performance by the defendant. Cases where the contract states a time for performance are relatively straightforward. Assume, for example, that a buyer wrongfully repudiates its obligations prior to the time for performance, and the seller terminates performance prior to the date for payment. Damages are assessed on the basis of market values existing at the time when performance would have been due.14 Thus, the earlier date — the date of termination — is rejected. If the case happens to come to trial before the contractual date, the court must determine the market price ‘as best it can’.15 Although conceptually more difficult, the position is the same where no time is fixed for performance. Thus, in Tai Hing Cotton Mill Ltd v Kamsing Knitting Factory,16 the Privy Council decided that a buyer was entitled to damages for anticipatory breach equal to the difference between the contract price and the market price on the last day on which the buyers could have given reasonable notice requiring delivery of the goods.17 [36-05] Mitigation.18 Where A repudiates obligations under a contract with B prior to performance falling due, there is no breach of contract. Therefore no question of mitigation on the part of B can arise until the repudiation has been accepted as an anticipatory breach. Disagreements frequently arise on the market price to be taken in sale of goods cases. One reason for the general rule that damages are assessed as at the date specified for performance is to avoid the possibility that, on a falling (or rising) market, a plaintiff might recover a substantial sum simply by terminating the contract at an early date. But it is also clear that any reasonable opportunity for mitigation must be taken. Thus, if a seller repudiates its obligations, and the buyer accepts the seller’s repudiation on
a rising market, the buyer should buy in against the contract with the seller if there is a reasonable opportunity to do so.19 If the buyer fails to do so, and the market price continues to rise until the date for delivery, the buyer will find it difficult to have damages assessed as at the time for delivery.20 On the other hand, if the buyer, acting reasonably, does buy in, damages are assessed at the date of repurchase21 even if the buyer has paid a higher price than that which (later) rules at the date fixed for delivery. The same principles apply where the defendant’s breach is not wholly anticipatory. In Payzu Ltd v Saunders22 a contract for the sale of two [page 850] instalments of crepe de chine provided for delivery between January and September 1918. Payment was to be made for each instalment within one month of delivery. The seller repudiated her obligations in January 1918 and the buyers claimed damages. But the seller had been ready and willing to supply goods for cash and argued that the buyers should have accepted this offer in order to mitigate their loss. The English Court of Appeal agreed. Scrutton LJ said23 that ‘in commercial contracts it is generally reasonable to accept an offer from the party in default’. The idea that it may be unreasonable for a plaintiff not to accept a defendant’s offer to enter into a subsequent contract is of general application and therefore applies to termination for actual breach. Indeed, it was taken a step further by the ‘quite extraordinary’24 decision of the English Court of Appeal in Sotiros Shipping Inc v Sameiet Solholt (The Solholt).25 Buyers cancelled a contract for the sale of a ship pursuant to an express right of termination when the vessel was not delivered on time. The contract price was for $US5 million, but at the time of cancellation the vessel was worth $US5.5 million. The buyers sought to recover the $US0.5 million loss, but went away empty handed. It was held that the failure to make an offer to buy the vessel for $US5 million was a failure to mitigate. The court affirmed the decision of Staughton J who had said:26 ‘The test is: Did the innocent party act reasonably in mitigating his loss? That must include consideration of any opportunity he had to make a fresh bargain.’ While it is easy to agree that a plaintiff should accept a reasonable offer of a substitute contract, it is not so easy to see why a plaintiff should be regarded as failing to mitigate merely because the defendant would probably have accepted an offer to
perform the contract at the contract price.
Delay in Performance [36-06] Damages for delay. It is now clearly established that a failure to perform on time is a breach of contract even if the time stipulation is not essential.27 Accordingly, damages for delay may be available to a plaintiff. For example, in Oakacre Ltd v Claire Cleaners (Holdings) Ltd28 it was held that delay in completion of a contract for the sale of land could be relied upon by purchasers as a ground for claiming damages.29 [36-07] Delay in the payment of money. The traditional approach of the common law has been to deny the recovery of damages, whether in the form of interest or otherwise, for the mere failure to pay money on time. It [page 851] mattered not whether the money was a debt due under the contract, money which the plaintiff was denied by the breach or the money value of the loss caused by the defendant’s breach.30 The major problem created is that a plaintiff entitled to receive payment of a debt, such as rent due under a lease, was by this rule deprived of the right to claim compensation for the loss suffered in not receiving the money on the due date. The common law rule is based on the unreal assumption that the value of money does not change, and that inflation should be disregarded when assessing damages. It is, however, qualified in several ways. First, at the very specific level, it is always open to parties to insert terms in the contract by which they agree that interest is to be payable.31 Second, and more generally, courts have a discretionary power to order the payment of interest in defined circumstances.32 Interest is recoverable on all claims for breach of contract (or tort) that give rise to a money judgment. Since the award of the court occurs after the loss is suffered, this power provides a measure of protection against the loss suffered on the (subsequent) conversion of the plaintiff’s loss into a money sum. However, it is principally because: (1) the power is discretionary; and (2) it does not cover all the situations in which a plaintiff in a breach of contract case may wish to claim compensation for the late payment of money, that it is important to consider the common law approach.
Third, the common law rule is not as broad as it sounds. Thus, the rule is not relevant where a contract is terminated for repudiation. The defendant becomes liable to pay loss of bargain damages even if its principal obligation was to pay money. For example, if a buyer of goods is guilty of non-acceptance, the seller’s claim for general damages is not based on a failure to pay money. Similarly, if a buyer of goods fails to open a letter of credit in the seller’s favour, the seller’s claim is not conceived of as being for the failure to pay money in accordance with the contract. The credit operates as a guarantee of performance and it is for breach of the obligation to provide the guarantee that the seller may claim damages.33 Fourth, in recent years the courts have reconsidered the common law rule, and sought to confine its operation, in order to achieve flexibility and lessen the injustices of the rule. In Trans Trust SPRL v Danubian Trading Co Ltd34 Denning LJ said that it was too ‘rigid’ a proposition to say that damages can never be recovered for the failure to pay money. The English courts35 have confined the common law rule by recourse to the second limb [page 852] of the rule in Hadley v Baxendale.36 However, in Australia a more direct attack has been made on the rule. In Hungerfords v Walker37 the defendants were accountants engaged to prepare tax returns for the plaintiffs who carried on business as a partnership. For a number of years an error was made in preparing returns which resulted in the overpayment of tax. This error arose due to the defendants’ negligent breach of contract. Ultimately, the error was discovered and the plaintiffs were able to recover some of the overpaid tax from the taxation authorities. The plaintiffs sought to recover the balance of overpaid tax, together with damages for the loss of use of the money. The High Court took the view that the plaintiffs had suffered an economic loss. They had been deprived of the use of the money which was paid away due to the defendants’ breach, and thereby had been deprived of the opportunity to invest. Alternatively, they had incurred a borrowing cost, that is, suffered loss by having to borrow money to pay their tax.38 Damages were therefore recovered by the plaintiffs, and the court made it clear that recovery was based on the first limb of the rule in Hadley v Baxendale. This amounts to a proposition that the defendant was regarded as having
contemplated such loss ‘according to the usual course of things’ by reason of the defendant’s breach. Of course, the second limb of the rule will be relevant in cases where the plaintiff’s claim is for an exceptional economic loss, for example, a claim that a particularly lucrative investment was lost.39 It follows that the statutory provisions allowing the recovery of interest are not exhaustive codes governing the award of interest. However, two points are important. First, a plaintiff is still required to establish (and ultimately quantify) a loss which was not only caused by the defendant’s failure to pay money but which is also not too remote. In other words, the recovery of damages in the form of interest is a matter of proof not assumption.40 Second, the fact that a liability to pay damages accrues on the occurrence of a breach of contract does not entitle the plaintiff to say that there was from that time a sum of money (the sum ultimately awarded) which is being detained by the defendant. In Hungerfords v Walker the court took the view that the case involved more than a claim for damages for the late payment of damages. However, the High Court approved President of India v Lips Maritime Corp41 where the House of Lords affirmed the view that there is ‘no such thing as a cause of action in damages for late payment of damages. The only remedy that the law affords for delay in paying damages is the discretionary award of interest pursuant to statute’. That principle also applies to a failure to pay liquidated damages,42 on the basis that [page 853] liquidation of damages in the contract does not alter the character of the defendant’s liability.
Injured Feelings, Disappointment and Loss of Reputation [36-08] General. Damages claims for injured feelings, disappointment, distress or vexation raise a number of difficulties. We have already seen43 that punitive damages are not awarded in contract. In Addis v Gramophone Co Ltd44 it was decided that it was not competent for the jury to award a sum in respect of the
harsh and humiliating manner of the plaintiff’s dismissal. Thus, the manner of breach is not a basis for increasing the defendant’s liability. Moreover, distinguishing manner of breach from damage in the form of injured feelings or disappointment in performance may not be easy. Most breaches of contract are likely to cause some disappointment to a plaintiff. If causation and remoteness were the only criteria, claims for disappointment would nearly always be successful, although quantification would present real difficulties because of the nonpecuniary nature of the loss. Therefore, although it would be wrong to deny damages in all cases, there must be some (additional) justification, beyond mere disappointment. It is accordingly quite clear that, where the contract is a standard transaction, damages for disappointment will not be awarded. For example, in Falko v James McEwan & Co Pty Ltd45 Anderson J refused to award damages for disappointment when the defendants breached a contract to supply and install an oil heater in the plaintiff’s home. The consequence of the defendants’ breach was for the plaintiff to be without adequate heating and this certainly caused some inconvenience and disappointment. But the disappointment was minimal and the contract was in the nature of an ordinary transaction for sale and supply and the defects in the heater could have been remedied by the plaintiff at a small cost. Recovery was limited to pecuniary loss on that ground. In Hobbs v London and South Western Railway Co46 the plaintiffs took tickets for conveyance by train from Wimbledon to Hampton Court. In breach of contract the plaintiffs were taken to Esher and it was therefore necessary for them to walk the remaining distance to their home. It was a wet night and the plaintiffs were awarded £8 for the inconvenience which they suffered. The award was upheld on the basis that damages are recoverable for physical inconvenience.47 However, Mellor J said48 that ‘for the mere inconvenience, such as annoyance and loss of temper, or vexation, or for being disappointed in a particular thing which you have set your [page 854] mind upon, without real physical inconvenience resulting, you cannot recover damages’. The court denied recovery of damages as compensation for illness suffered as a consequence of having to walk home in the rain on the ground that it was too remote. However, the decision indicates that physical inconvenience
or suffering is a sufficient justification for an award where it is not too remote. In Cox v Phillips Industries Ltd49 the plaintiff recovered damages — for injured feelings — when he was removed by his employers to a position of lesser responsibility in the company. The employers’ conduct was a breach of contract, and Lawson J said that vexation, distress and general disappointment and frustration were within the contemplation of the parties. Notwithstanding that the decision might be justified on the basis that the plaintiff’s depression had led to physical ill health, Lawson J was, it seems, content merely to apply a criterion of remoteness. Damages for vexation, distress and general disappointment and frustration cannot be awarded merely on the basis that these matters were within the contemplation of the parties, since that would treat remoteness as a criterion for increasing (rather than reducing) damages liability.50 Lawson J’s broad approach has therefore not been followed, and Cox was disapproved by the English Court of Appeal in Bliss v South East Thames Regional Health Authority,51 a decision which was approved by the High Court in Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov).52 On the other hand, in Bliss it was recognised53 that a plaintiff is entitled to recover ‘where the contract which has been broken was itself a contract to provide peace of mind or freedom from distress’. Thus, in Heywood v Wellers54 the plaintiff recovered damages from a firm of solicitors when their breach of contract caused upset and distress. The solicitors had been engaged to take proceedings to protect the plaintiff from molestation by one Morrison, but owing to their negligence, in not obtaining a final injunction against Morrison when the plaintiff was entitled to the order, the molestation continued. [36-09] Breach of a contract to provide entertainment or enjoyment. In Jarvis v Swans Tours Ltd55 the plaintiff booked a skiing holiday in Zurich with the defendants and paid a sum of £63.45. The holiday was a great disappointment, mainly due to absence of proper facilities for skiing and the failure of the defendants to provide the services [page 855] promised. On this basis, a sum of £125 was awarded and the court said that the general rule against the award of damages for injured feelings or disappointment does not apply where there is a breach of a contract to provide entertainment or enjoyment.56
Jarvis v Swans Tours was approved by the High Court in Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov).57 In that case Ms Dillon, a passenger on a cruise ship, sued to recover compensation when the voyage was dramatically cut short half way through a 14-day cruise when the vessel sank as a result of negligent navigation. Ms Dillon lost items of personal property, she suffered physical injuries and emotional trauma and severe tension of mind. She was also disappointed and distressed. The contract was naturally characterised as one the object of which was to provide for enjoyment and relaxation. Clearly, she was entitled to an award of damages for the loss of her property, for her injuries, inconvenience and emotional trauma. All these matters were caused by the breach of contract and not too remote. But since the contract was one for enjoyment she was also entitled to say that damages were recoverable for her disappointment and distress. Although the cases speak in terms of whether the ‘object’ of the contract58 is to provide entertainment or enjoyment, it is sufficient that this is a major or important purpose or term of the contract.59 [36-10] Loss of reputation or publicity. Damages for loss of reputation or publicity are recoverable where the contract expressly or impliedly promises publicity or enhancement to reputation. Thus, in Marbe v George Edwardes (Daly’s Theatre) Ltd60 Barnes LJ stated:61 [I]t is sufficiently established that where there has been a breach of a contract to employ an actress, whose reputation depends on the continued and successful practice of her art, and where the engagement is accompanied by promises of widespread publicity and advertisement which will probably lead to future opportunities following on successful performance, the court recognises that the damages for that breach may properly include such a sum as a jury may award to compensate the plaintiff for the loss of the reputation which would have been acquired, or damage to reputation already acquired, or, to use another expression, for loss of publicity.
[page 856] For example, in Herbert Clayton and Jack Waller Ltd v Oliver62 the plaintiff was an American actor engaged by the defendants to play one of the three leading roles in a musical for six weeks at a salary of £55 per week. In breach of contract the defendants assigned to the plaintiff a role which was not one of the three leading parts and the plaintiff declined to appear. The jury awarded £1000 damages for loss of publicity. The House of Lords held that the plaintiff was entitled to damages for loss of publicity, and although the damages awarded by the jury were probably extravagant, they were not so extravagant as to require a
fresh assessment.
Reinstatement Costs63 [36-11] Diminished value or reinstatement cost? In cases where the defendant breaches a promise to build or to do repair work the courts generally award the cost of remedying any defects in the work done.64 This award is in preference to an award of the difference between the value of the work done and the value the work would have had if it been in accordance with the contract. Similarly, where the defendant has done nothing at all, a court will award the cost of doing the work. Thus, in Bellgrove v Eldridge65 a builder sued to recover £400 alleged to be due under a building contract by which he undertook to build for the defendant a two storey ‘villa’ for £3500. The defendant, who had paid £3100, was dissatisfied with the building erected. She brought a cross-action for damages. O’Bryan J found substantial departures from the contract in the composition of the concrete in the foundations of the building and in the mortar used to cement the brick walls and awarded £4950 on the cross-action. That sum represented the cost of demolishing the building and re-erecting it in accordance with the contract. The decision was upheld in the High Court. The general rule in other cases where the defendant’s breach relates to the quality or condition of goods or services supplied, is that the plaintiff is limited to the difference in value measure.66 However, reinstatement costs may be recoverable in cases where the defendant’s breach causes damage to the plaintiff’s property,67 although in that context as well it is perhaps more common to award the difference between the value of the property before and after breach. [page 857] [36-12] Relevance of plaintiff’s intention and mitigation. In Bellgrove v Eldridge68 the High Court said:69 It was suggested during the course of argument that if the respondent retains her present judgment and it is satisfied, she may or may not demolish the existing house and re-erect another. If she does not, it is said, she will still have a house together with the cost of erecting another one. To our mind this circumstance is quite immaterial and is but one variation of a feature which so often presents itself in the assessment of damages in cases where they must be assessed once and for all.
Thus, under Australian law it is not essential for the plaintiff to have an intention to use the award to carry out the reinstatement. The cost of reinstatement may, of course, be more than the value of the property after it has been reinstated, in which case an issue of mitigation may arise. Or the property may cost more to reinstate than its current value. In Bellgrove v Eldridge70 the High Court said that there is a qualification to the rule expressed, namely, ‘that, not only must the work undertaken be necessary to produce conformity, but that also, it must be a reasonable course to adopt’.71 This presented no difficulty because the defect in the foundations seriously threatened the stability of the house, and could be remedied only by demolition and re-erection.72 On the other hand, in Ruxley Electronics and Constructions Ltd v Forsyth73 the House of Lords refused to award reinstatement damages where a swimming pool was not built to the depth required by the contract. There was no substantial loss of amenity, and the pool was (as built) quite safe for swimming and diving. Moreover, the cost of rebuilding was out of all proportion to the value which would be added by doing the work. It was therefore thought to be unreasonable for the customer to insist on rebuilding. An award was, however, made by way of compensation for loss of amenity. It is unclear whether a plaintiff should be entitled to recover reinstatement costs if the property of the plaintiff will diminish in value by virtue of reinstatement.74 In principle this should depend on whether, notwithstanding the diminution of value, it is reasonable for the plaintiff to reinstate the property. But it would be wrong to take a narrow and materialistic view.75 [page 858]
Termination76 [36-13] Accrued right to damages not divested. Where the plaintiff’s right to recover damages accrued prior to termination of the performance of the contract, the right survives termination.77 The plaintiff’s accrued right to damages may be additional to other accrued rights, such as a right to receive performance.78 Although the claimant will usually be the party who terminated the performance of the contract, the accrued right will survive termination even if it was the other party who validly terminated performance.79
[36-14] Loss of bargain damages. The expression ‘loss of bargain damages’ describes damages which represent the difference between the market value of the contract or its subject matter and the price (or monetary equivalent) expressed in the contract.80 Discharge of the contract, by termination for repudiation or breach, is necessary before such damages can be recovered.81 As we saw earlier,82 in cases of anticipatory breach, the general approach is to treat the time for performance as the date for assessment, even if the contract did not expressly fix a time for performance. Thus, in Hoffman v Cali83 a contract for the purchase of a home unit for $89,000 did not fix a time for completion. Performance was therefore required within a reasonable time. Before that time had expired the vendors repudiated the contract and the purchaser terminated the contract and sought damages for anticipatory breach. Although completion would not have been due until about September 1982, the contract was terminated sometime between the end of November 1981 and 26 February 1982. The value of the unit between December 1981 and February 1982 was $130,000. From the middle of 1982 prices fell, so that in September 1982 the market price of the unit was $104,000. The court assessed damages at $15,000, that is, the difference between the contract price and the market price in September 1982, when the contract ought to have been completed. [page 859] [36-15] Relevance of basis for termination. Where the plaintiff’s termination is based on repudiation or breach of an essential term there is a presumption that the plaintiff can recover loss of bargain damages.84 The same is true where termination is based on a sufficiently serious breach of an intermediate term. Moreover, for the purpose of this analysis, where termination is based on the breach of a term classified as a condition, it does not matter whether this classification is made on the ground of commercial convenience or because breach of the term is likely to have serious consequences.85 We have already seen how a prima facie measure of this kind is used in sale of goods transactions.86 Thus, where time of delivery is essential, a buyer is entitled to reject the goods, if tendered late, and to terminate the contract. The buyer can then recover loss of bargain damages — for non-delivery — whether or not a loss would have been suffered on acceptance of the late delivery. A much debated question is how to deal with termination pursuant to a clause
expressly conferring a right to terminate for what may (and usually will) be a minor breach. Although such a clause may also contain an agreed damages provision,87 it is not the function of such clauses to express agreement on the damages recoverable. Rather, they are inserted to provide a means of termination which depends on proof of nothing more than that an event within the purview of the clause has occurred.88 In Shevill v Builders Licensing Board89 a lessor claimed loss of bargain damages on the termination of a commercial lease of land pursuant to an express contractual right. Rent had been outstanding for a period of 14 days, an event which triggered the lessor’s right of termination, and the lessor complied with the formal requirements for valid termination. However, as there was no breach of any essential term, and no repudiation or serious breach by the lessee, the lessor was restricted to the recovery of a nominal sum.90 Subsequent cases91 have justified the decision in Shevill on the basis that the loss which the lessor suffered, by renting the property to a third party at a lower rent, was caused by the decision to terminate in the face of the lessee’s ability to pay. On this approach, a plaintiff who seeks loss of bargain damages following exercise of a contractual right to terminate must show that, as a matter of construction, the term breached was an essential term.92 [page 860] Alternatively, where the term breached was not essential, the plaintiff will need to prove a repudiation or serious breach on the defendant’s part. Thus, in Progressive Mailing House Pty Ltd v Tabali Pty Ltd93 a lessor leased factory premises to the lessee for a period of five years. As in Shevill, the lease provided for a right of termination in respect of a number of events, including ‘rent or other moneys payable’ under the lease remaining unpaid for 14 days, or the lessee failing ‘to perform or observe any one or more of the covenants or provisions’ of the lease and failing to remedy same after 30 days’ notice. No rent was paid for a period of four months, and the lessor validly terminated the lease and sought as compensation the difference between the rent reserved by the lease for its total term and that which would be received on a reletting of the premises. The lessee had done more than merely fail to pay rent. There were breaches which, when combined with the failure to pay rent, enabled the High Court to find repudiation or serious (‘fundamental’) breach on the part of the lessee. Accordingly, the lessor was successful.
For a number of reasons the reasoning in Shevill is not satisfactory. First, the idea that the plaintiff causes the loss suffered seems commercially unreal. Second, and more significantly, the effect is to require a plaintiff who seeks compensation to do the very thing that the clause was intended to avoid, namely, to prove a breach which would, apart from the clause, have justified termination. Third, the result creates a tension between form and substance when efforts are made to avoid the result.94 Fourth, it might be suggested that a better approach was put forward by Jordan CJ in Larratt v Bankers and Traders Insurance Co Ltd95 when he said that the ‘consequences which flow’ from termination by virtue of an express right96 depend on the intention of the parties, actual or imputed, and, in the absence of some express or implied indication of intention to the contrary, are governed by the ordinary law applicable to the avoidance of contracts for breaches of essential promises.
On this view, the right to recover loss of bargain damages is not affected by the causation problem exposed in Shevill, since the loss of the bargain is regarded as having been caused by the defendant’s breach. Thus, in Sotiros Shipping Inc v Sameiet Solholt (The Solholt)97 Sir John Donaldson MR said98 it is ‘trite law’ that in deciding whether to exercise a contractual right to cancel the plaintiff need have ‘no regard to the fact that in the absence of cancellation he would suffer no loss’. There is some support for Jordan CJ’s approach in preference to Shevill.99 However, it is a matter which can only be resolved by the High Court. [page 861] [36-16] Discounting the award. Termination, particularly in the case of anticipatory breach, may raise the issue of whether the plaintiff’s award should be discounted. The most obvious case for discount is where the award is a lump sum representing money which the defendant promised to pay at a future date. Since there is an element of acceleration, the plaintiff will be awarded the present value of the sum which the defendant agreed to pay.100 For example, if the plaintiff is a creditor suing the guarantor of a debtor who promised to pay the debt by instalments over time, discount will be necessary in respect of sums which had not fallen due for payment by the debtor at the time of termination. The need for discount will not arise if the court delivers judgment after the time when payment was due101 because there is then no acceleration of the defendant’s promise to pay.
[36-17] Subsequent events and accrued rights. Subsequent events sometimes need to be taken into account when assessing damages. This is mainly true in cases where some or all of the defendant’s obligations had not fallen due for performance at the time of termination, but it may also apply to termination for breach of a term. Since damages must be assessed by reference to the realities of the situation, account must be taken of events which have in fact occurred and which indicate that the plaintiff’s award should be reduced.102 Where an event might have occurred had the contract run its course, this may be taken into account even though the contract has been terminated.103 There are three points. First, the clearest case is where the event was certain to occur. It was explained earlier104 that in Maredelanto Compania Naviera SA v BergbauHandel GmbH (The Mihalis Angelos)105 the charterers’ termination was justified because of the shipowners’ breach of condition. However, Mocatta J had held that the charterers were guilty of anticipatory breach and awarded the shipowners substantial damages even though, had the charter run its course, the charterers would have been able to cancel the contract pursuant to a cancellation clause. Mocatta J relied on the inevitable breach basis for the doctrine of anticipatory breach106 and said that he was not entitled to reduce the award to take account of events which would have occurred. Having reversed Mocatta J’s decision on the interpretation of the expected readiness clause, it was not strictly necessary to consider the damages point, because there was no anticipatory breach by the charterers. However, the English Court of Appeal said that the inevitable breach basis for the doctrine does not prevent the court having regard to subsequent events. Accordingly, because the charterers would [page 862] undoubtedly have exercised their right of cancellation, the shipowners would only have recovered a nominal sum. In other words, the shipowners would not have suffered any loss had the charterers been guilty of anticipatory breach.107 The Mihalis Angelos was distinguished, but the result was analogous, in the much discussed108 Golden Strait Corp v Nippon Yusen Kubishika Kaisha (The Golden Victory).109 Charterers repudiated a long-term charterparty. The owners accepted the repudiation and claimed damages. Had the contract not been repudiated, a right to cancel the charterparty under an express cancellation clause would have become operative because of the 2003 war in Iraq. Unlike the
position in The Mihalis Angelos, where it was already clear at the time of the (assumed) breach that the vessel would not have arrived in time, at the date of termination in The Golden Victory the 2003 war was a matter of speculation. The shipowners therefore argued that the charterers were not entitled to have their damages liability reduced by reference to the cancellation clause. A majority of the House of Lords (Lords Bingham and Walker dissenting) rejected this argument and held that it was necessary to take account of the fact that the contract would have been cancelled. The rationale is that a court should not ignore facts known at the time when damages are assessed. Since damages must be assessed by reference to the realities of the situation, account must be taken of events which have in fact occurred and which enable the plaintiff’s award to be more accurately assessed. Second, where the defendant’s obligation to perform was subject to a contingency which might not have been fulfilled, the possibility of its nonoccurrence may need to be taken into account even if the defendant did not promise that it would occur. For example, in Frost v Knight110 the defendant’s promise to marry was contingent on the death of his father and there was the possibility that the plaintiff (or defendant) might not outlive the father. Therefore, although the plaintiff’s acceptance of the defendant’s repudiation meant that her cause of action was complete, some discount in her award was appropriate. Third, if there is evidence that the defendant might subsequently have been in a position to terminate for breach by the plaintiff, the court may take this into account, and discount the award to reflect the possibility.111 However, because the plaintiff is entitled to be placed in the position which [page 863] would have been occupied had the contract been performed, a discount is rarely appropriate. These situations illustrate that once the plaintiff has a cause of action for damages, it may be reduced, but is not divested, by subsequent events. It also follows that reduction may be necessary in order to take account of a defendant’s pre-existing cause of action. For example, where a buyer rejects documents tendered under a CIF contract, and the seller terminates performance, for example, for breach of condition, the buyer may set up any cause of action for
damages for breach of warranty which accrued prior to termination. Thus, if the buyer proves that the seller shipped goods which were not of the quality provided for by the contract, the seller’s damages must be reduced. Prima facie the seller would recover the difference between the contract price of the goods and the price obtainable on the market for the documents representing the goods. However, this would, to use Lord Diplock’s words in Berger & Co Inc v Gill & Duffus SA,112 ‘fall to be reduced by the sum’ which the buyer ‘would have been entitled to set up in diminution of the contract price by reason of the breach of warranty as to … quality’.
[36-18] Alternative Methods of Performance [36-18] Assessment on basis beneficial to defendant. Where the defendant could have performed the contract in alternative ways, damages are assessed, at least in the case of nonperformance, on the basis of the performance least onerous to the defendant.113 For example, where a contract for the sale of goods provides that the seller may deliver ‘1000 tonnes, five per cent more or less at seller’s option’, damages will, in a case of non-delivery, be assessed on the basis of non-delivery of 950 tonnes.114 To the extent that cancellation under an express clause may be seen as performance of a contract, the discussion in Maredelanto Compania Naviera SA v Bergbau-Handel GmbH (The Mihalis Angelos),115 deals with an analogous situation. In TCN Channel 9 Pty Ltd v Hayden Enterprises Pty Ltd,116 two contracts were entered into in 1985 between TCN and the plaintiff companies. Those contracts were repudiated by TCN and the plaintiffs terminated performance. Clause 10 of one of the contracts conferred on TCN the right to terminate by giving three months’ notice, and one argument by which it sought to limit its damages was by alleging that it would have exercised this right. However, termination would have involved ceasing transmission of a television programme to which the agreement related and which was regarded as a profitable enterprise. Since [page 864]
the evidence showed that this was not TCN’s intention, the course of conduct alleged could not be regarded as the performance least onerous to the company.
Loss of Chance [36-19] The concept. In some cases it may be clear that the defendant’s breach has caused loss to the plaintiff, but be very difficult to quantify that loss. As was explained earlier,117 difficulty in assessing damages is not a basis for a refusal to make an award in the plaintiff’s favour. The concept of damages for loss of a chance frequently operates where damages in contract are difficult to assess and involves the court in estimating the plaintiff’s chance of obtaining benefits from the defendant’s performance. The fact that the defendant has not performed means that the plaintiff’s chance of obtaining the benefit has been lost, but may make it very difficult to determine what the plaintiff would have gained. Where, as in McRae v Commonwealth Disposals Commission,118 the element of chance lies in the nature of the thing contracted for, in that case a stranded tanker which did not in fact exist, there is no ground for awarding damages on a loss of chance basis. The position would have been different had the tanker existed and the defendants’ breach involved, say, the refusal to supply correct information as to its location. Similarly, where the loss suffered is so dependent on the exercise of a person’s discretion in the plaintiff’s favour that it is impossible to say there has been any assessable loss, only nominal damages will be awarded.119 [36-20] Principles. There are three categories of case in which damages for breach of contract may be awarded on a loss of chance basis: (1) where the principal object of the contract, from the plaintiff’s perspective, was to provide the chance of obtaining a benefit; (2) where the contract (expressly or impliedly) included a promise by the defendant of a chance to obtain a benefit; and (3) in any other case where a business opportunity is lost as a consequence of the defendant’s breach and the loss of the opportunity is within the rules on remoteness of damage. Even if it has a less than 50 per cent chance of obtaining the benefit which is the subject of the chance, the plaintiff will be entitled to recover something. Thus, in Sellars v Adelaide Petroleum NL120 Mason CJ, Dawson, Toohey and Gaudron JJ said:
In the realm of contract law, the loss of a chance to win a prize in a competition resulting from breach of a contract to provide the chance is compensable, notwithstanding that, on the balance of probabilities, it is more likely than not that the plaintiff would not win the competition …
[page 865] A leading case on loss of chance, which illustrates the first category, is Chaplin v Hicks121 where the defendant’s breach of contract deprived the plaintiff of the opportunity of competing in a contest. There was, of course, no certainty that the plaintiff would have won a prize in the contest, but the defendant’s breach deprived her of the chance of doing so and she was entitled to receive an award on that basis. Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd122 illustrates the second category. It was there held that although the Commonwealth had not guaranteed the plaintiff a renewal of the contract which it repudiated, it did have the benefit of an implied promise which Brennan J formulated123 in terms of a ‘promise to give the plaintiff an opportunity to acquire the unexpressed benefit’. Since that promise was breached, the plaintiff was entitled to an award, apparently as a distinct head of loss, which represented the value of the chance. In David Securities Pty Ltd v Commonwealth Bank of Australia124 the Full Federal Court referred to Chaplin v Hicks as a ‘classic case providing a source for development of the law to provide recovery in respect of lost business opportunities’. There are, therefore, situations in which a loss of chance award — for lost business opportunities — may be made although there was no promise of a chance. In such a case, damages for lost business opportunity are recovered for consequential loss.125 Assuming that damages for loss of a chance are recoverable, the question of assessment will arise. Damages are ‘ascertained by reference to the court’s assessment of the prospects of success of that opportunity had it been pursued’.126 For example, in Howe v Teefy127 the defendant leased a racehorse to the plaintiff, who was a trainer, for a period of three years. After about three months the defendant, in breach of contract, removed the horse from the plaintiff thereby depriving him of the chance of recouping the cost of training the horse out of the prize money which the horse might have earned, and from the money which he might have made in betting on the horse and supplying information to other people. The plaintiff had certainly lost something of value, but the loss was extremely difficult to assess. Street CJ said128 that the ‘calculation … to make
was not how much he would probably have made in the shape of profit out of his use of the horse, but how much his chance of making that profit, by having the use of the horse, was worth in money’. A sum of £250 had been awarded by the jury and the Full Court considered that it was impossible to interfere with that award. [page 866]
Rule in Bain v Fothergill [36-21] Common law. In 1874 the House of Lords expressed its approval of a rule which restricts the damages payable by a defendant who is unable to transfer a good title to land. The ‘rule in Bain v Fothergill’,129 as it has been termed, denies the plaintiff the right to recover loss of bargain damages and restricts the claim to the recovery of the deposit (if paid), expenses in investigating title and interest. In other words, there is a measure of compensation for reliance loss but no damages in protection of the plaintiff’s expectation loss. The rationale for this anomalous rule was said to be the uncertainty and difficulty involved in establishing good title to land. This might have been true in England in the 19th century, but it is not the position today. In Sharneyford Supplies Ltd v Edge130 Balcombe LJ said that the rule is ‘today impossible to justify’. It was, indeed, open to Australian courts to say that the rule in Bain v Fothergill is not applicable to land held under the Torrens system, where the title to land is established by a search of registered interests. Nevertheless, when the Australian courts adopted the rule it was not restricted to land being held under old system title.131 When approving the rule, the House of Lords excepted the case of fraud. Therefore, a vendor who knowingly misrepresents the existence of a clear title to land the subject of an agreement to sell must pay damages to the purchaser. Presumably, however, these damages would, at common law, be based on the tort of deceit and therefore not lead to the recovery of loss of bargain damages in contract.132 It is hardly surprising that the courts have engrafted further exceptions on the rule, and that it has been abolished in some jurisdictions.133 An important qualification is that the rule applies only to title defects and not matters of conveyancing.134 The rule will therefore not apply where the vendor is at fault, in the sense that the vendor has refrained from taking steps to secure a
good title. For example, in Malhotra v Choudhury135 the [page 867] English Court of Appeal held that the rule did not apply where the defect in title was the refusal of a co-owner (who was not a party to the contract) to join in the conveyance of the property and the vendor had made no efforts to get her cooperation in the matter. Stephenson LJ went so far as to say:136 But I conclude … that to come within this anomalous exception a vendor must prove his inability to carry out his contractual obligations. And if the evidence leaves the court in the position where the right inference is that inability is not proved, then, even where there is no allegation of the duty to use his best endeavours to carry out his contractual obligations and of a breach of that duty, as in this case, it is open to the court to hold that the ordinary principle of damages, putting a victim of a breach of contract in the position in which he would have been if the contract had been performed, applies …
In Wroth v Tyler137 Megarry J held that the rule in Bain v Fothergill does not apply where the defect in the vendor’s title is not present at the time the contract is entered into, but arises subsequently, prior to completion of the contract. In such a case loss of bargain damages are available. Again, in ASA Constructions Pty Ltd v Iwanov,138 Needham J held that the rule did not apply where the defect in title arose from the vendor’s reckless decision to enter into a contract of sale after he had already agreed to sell the property to another purchaser. [36-22] Statute. Section 68(1) of the Property Law Act 1974 (Qld) and s 70 of the Law of Property Act 2000 (NT) abolish the rule in Bain v Fothergill except in its application to contracts for the sale of ‘unregistered’ land. These provisions state that a purchaser is entitled to recover damages to cover the loss which was ‘liable to result’ and in fact sustained by reason of the vendor’s breach. Unless the contract provides to the contrary, the vendor is not relieved from the obligation to compensate the purchaser by reason only of an inability to make title to the land the subject of the contract of sale, whether or not such inability was occasioned by the vendor’s own default. In New South Wales, the rule has been abolished both in relation to registered land and in relation to unregistered land by s 54B of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW). Moreover, the parties to the contract may not reinstate the rule by express contractual provision.139 However, since there is nothing in the provision to indicate the criterion of remoteness which governs damages recovery, general principles apply.140
Taxation and Inflation [36-23] Taxation. In British Transport Commission v Gourley141 the House of Lords, in the context of an action for damages in tort, held that the tax [page 868] position of the plaintiff was relevant to the assessment of damages. A majority of the High Court held142 in Cullen v Trappell143 that Gourley should be followed in Australia. For the court to take taxation into account when assessing the plaintiff’s damages two circumstances must generally be found. First, the award of damages must not be taxable. Second, the earnings or profit which the plaintiff has lost, and in respect of which the damages are awarded, must have been such that they would have been taxable had they been received. Assuming that these requirements are met the court will assess the tax notionally payable by the plaintiff and deduct this from the award.144 But the court will strive for ‘substantial fairness rather than precise accuracy’145 when arriving at a figure. In most actions for damages in contract the damages will not be subject to a deduction for taxation for the simple reason that the plaintiff either suffers a capital loss or the sum awarded will itself be taxable. However, taxation may be relevant to an action for damages for wrongful dismissal,146 and an action to recover damages for personal injury, at least where there is an element to cover loss of earnings.147 [36-24] Inflation. The courts have generally adhered to the view that no account should be taken of the likelihood of inflation in assessing damages, whether in tort or contract148 even though, at times, inflation rates are high. But the rule is really only relevant to inflation during the period subsequent to the court’s award, and inflation will in effect be taken into account where damages are assessed at the date of the award rather than the time of breach. This is the position in personal injury cases, and in Johnson v Perez149 Mason CJ was in favour of approaching in the same way an action against solicitors for negligence which, although brought in tort could have been brought in contract. The cause of action arose when negligence on the part of the solicitors caused the plaintiffs’ actions for damages for personal injury against their employers to be dismissed
for want of prosecution. However, a majority of the court thought that the appropriate date was when the personal injury claims were dismissed for want of prosecution. In Perry v Sidney Phillips & Son150 Lord Denning MR said that where the defendant is in breach of a promise to build or repair, and the court assesses damages on the basis of the cost of doing the work, increases in the cost due to inflation between the date of breach and the date of award are [page 869] recoverable. If the plaintiff has acted unreasonably in not carrying out the work, principles of mitigation may reduce the award. In contract cases the possibility of prejudice to the plaintiff, due to the failure to take account of inflation, occurs where the defendant’s breach gives rise to a loss of future income, for example, because of personal injury being suffered by the plaintiff. Wage rates can be expected to rise, and if the plaintiff is compensated by reference to present wage rates the plaintiff is to some extent prejudiced. But in Pennant Hills Restaurants Pty Ltd v Barrell Insurances Pty Ltd151 the court reduced the discount rate normally applied to awards made in actions for personal injury because the plaintiff was, as a result of the defendants’ breach, liable to make payments in accordance with the Workers’ Compensation Act 1926 (NSW). The Act expressly provided for periodic adjustment in accordance with average weekly wage rate changes. The defendants had failed, in breach of contract, to arrange insurance cover on the plaintiffs’ liability and in view of the fact that average weekly wages would undoubtedly rise in the future because of inflation it would have been wrong to ignore the effects of inflation. In other words, an award which took no account of inflation would not have been equivalent to the periodic sums which would, but for the defendants’ breach, have been payable under the Workers’ Compensation Act.
Lord Cairns’ Act152 [36-25] Damages in equity. Prior to the passing of the Chancery Amendment Act 1858 (UK),153 commonly referred to as Lord Cairns’ Act, the power of the Court of Chancery to award damages was uncertain.154 One object of the Act, and that most relevant to this work, was to confer jurisdiction to award damages
in addition to or in substitution for the remedies of specific performance and injunction. In New South Wales s 68 of the Supreme Court Act 1970 provides: Where the court has power — (a) to grant an injunction against the breach of any covenant, contract or agreement, or against the commission or continuance of any wrongful act; or (b) to order the specific performance of any covenant, contract or agreement, the court may award damages to the party injured either in addition to or in substitution for the injunction or specific performance.
Similar provisions are to be found in most other Australian jurisdictions.155 And in those jurisdictions in which there is no direct counterpart, the power can be implied from the statutory provisions conferring power to make appropriate orders, and those dealing with the administration of law and equity.156 [page 870] In order for damages to be awarded at common law the plaintiff’s cause of action must have arisen by the time proceedings are commenced. A feature of damages in equity is that damages may be awarded in cases in which a legal wrong, such as the commission of a breach of contract, is merely threatened. If there is jurisdiction to grant an injunction to prevent a breach of contract, damages may be awarded under Lord Cairns’ Act, for example, in substitution for the injunction, even though no breach has been committed. Damages may also be awarded in lieu of specific performance, although there is no remedy at common law because of a failure to comply with a requirement of writing.157 However, the plaintiff must prove acts of part performance sufficient to take the case outside the statute,158 or establish an estoppel precluding reliance on the statute.159 But, once a breach of contract is established, it has been doubted whether the assessment of damages under the Act differs from the common law.160 Is it sufficient for the plaintiff to show that the contract is of its nature susceptible to the equitable relief claimed, or must the position also be that the court has not refused the plaintiff relief on discretionary grounds?161 Conflicting views can be found in the cases.162 In Wentworth v Woollahra Municipal Council163 the High Court said it ‘conforms to the main object of the statute if damages … are awarded under the section, even though the claim for equitable relief is defeated by a discretionary defence such as laches, acquiescence or
hardship’. Although this suggests that the matter is still open in the High Court,164 the recent authorities support the view that the existence of a discretionary defence does not bar a claim for equitable damages.165 On the other hand, if the case for relief is not made out there is no basis for ordering the payment of damages.166 [page 871] [36-26] Damages in substitution. In Norton v Angus167 an action for specific performance of a contract for the sale of land failed because a majority of the High Court, in the exercise of its discretion, did not consider it fair to a purchaser of land to make the order. Knox CJ said168 that the ‘best justice’ of which the case was capable could be done by an inquiry into damages in substitution for specific performance. The contract provided for the sale of two selections under the Land Acts 1910–24 (Qld). But it would have been illegal for the purchaser to take a transfer of both selections. The effect of an order for specific performance would have been to compel the purchaser to find some person willing to accept a transfer of one of the selections, to reside on the land transferred and to pay rent to the Crown. If the purchaser transferred the land to a trustee it would be liable to forfeiture. These circumstances, and in particular the serious risk of forfeiture, justified the decision to award damages rather than specific performance. Again, in Biggin v Minton169 damages were awarded in substitution when a decree for specific performance proved useless because the purchaser under a contract for the sale of land failed to carry out the court’s order.170 On the other hand, in Jaggard v Sawyer171 damages were sought in lieu of injunction. The defendant failed to observe a restrictive covenant attaching to a residential property, and placed itself in the position where it would regularly trespass on the plaintiff’s land. The English Court of Appeal held that it was appropriate to award as damages in lieu of an injunction a sum which was a fair and proper price for release of the covenant. Although the award was rationalised on a compensatory basis, the award was based on the value to the plaintiff of the covenant breached. Since its value was enhanced by the ability to claim an injunction, this was taken into account in the award. [36-27] Damages in addition. Where a court orders specific performance or grants an injunction after the defendant has breached the contract, there would,
even apart from Lord Cairns’ Act, be a power to order the payment of damages in addition to the equitable relief. The fact that the defendant subsequently complies with the court’s order does not negate the earlier breach. However, the jurisdiction conferred by Lord Cairns’ Act will be relevant if there would be no power to award damages at common law, for example, because the plaintiff commenced proceedings prior to the defendant’s breach of contract.172 Damages in addition to specific performance were awarded by Goff J in Grant v Dawkins.173 A contract for the sale of land provided for the transfer of title free from encumbrances. However, the land was subject to two mortgages the redemption of which would cost more than the purchase [page 872] money. Damages in addition to specific performance were ordered so as to bridge the gap between the amount of the purchase price and the cost of redeeming the mortgages. [36-28] Date for assessment. The flexibility in the choice of the date for the assessment of damages, noted earlier,174 is most evident in the award of damages under Lord Cairns’ Act. In Wroth v Tyler175 damages were awarded in substitution for specific performance of a contract for the sale of land. The land had appreciated in value and was worth £1500 more than the contract price at the date of the vendor’s breach. However, by the time of the hearing the difference was £5500 and Megarry J reasoned that for the award to be truly substitutionary in character a later date than the time of breach had to be chosen. Accordingly, damages were assessed on the basis of the higher valuation of the property. When Wroth v Tyler was considered by the House of Lords in Johnson v Agnew176 the view was expressed that the decision should not be considered as laying down a basis for assessment different from that applicable at common law. Therefore, although the ability of the court to choose a date later than the date of breach was acknowledged, this cannot be justified on the ground that damages have to be ‘truly substitutionary’. The position is simply that a later date may be chosen if this is necessary to achieve justice. Accordingly, the fact that damages are given in lieu of specific performance is not, of itself, a sufficient justification for rejecting the date of breach as the proper date for assessment. Madden v Kevereski177 again concerned a contract for the sale of land.
Helsham CJ in Eq chose the date of the hearing of the action as the appropriate date for assessment. The contract price of the land was $33,500 and at the date of the hearing the land was valued at $55,000. The only complication in the case was that the matter had been before the Master after the date of the original hearing, and sent back to Helsham CJ in Eq for a decision on the date of assessment. The land had fallen in value to $47,000 but $55,000 was accepted as the basis for assessment, because the contract had been ‘lost’ at the date of the original judgment for damages in substitution for specific performance. It follows that there is no special rule applicable to damages awarded under Lord Cairns’ Act. The normal rule in contract cases — assessment as at the time of breach — will be applied unless the circumstances indicate that that is not the appropriate date.178 Moreover, as explained below, in cases where damages are awarded after an order for specific performance, a date later than the date of the defendant’s breach is usually more appropriate because when the order becomes incapable of enforcement there is, in effect, a subsequent breach. [page 873] [36-29] Damages after specific performance. Where damages are awarded after a decree for specific performance has been made, for example, because the order has not been complied with by the defendant, there are alternative bases for the award. First, as we have seen, the court may award damages under the legislative power, in substitution for the order for specific performance. Alternatively, the award may be under the common law, on the basis that the defendant’s breach (or repudiation) has179 been treated as a basis for termination. The question then arises whether any difference is likely in the assessment, depending on the basis for the award. In Johnson v Agnew180 the House of Lords decided that no distinction is to be drawn. Except to the extent that the Act creates a power to award damages which did not exist at common law, damages under Lord Cairns’ Act are to be assessed in the same way as damages at common law.181 Where damages are awarded after the failure of an order for specific performance, Johnson v Agnew indicates that, generally, the date for assessment will be the date when the contract is lost. Therefore, if, as in that case, the plaintiff has reasonably tried to have the contract completed and is pursuing the remedy of specific performance, the date for assessment will be pushed forward.
There is, however, no rule that damages must in such a case be assessed as at the date of the court’s judgment in the plaintiff’s favour, because the contract may be found to have been lost at an earlier date. In Johnson v Agnew the date chosen was the date on which the mortgagees of the vendor first contracted to sell the property. The sale occurred after the order for specific performance had been made, but before it had been carried out. In effect, the relevant date was the date when, without the default of the vendor, the order for specific performance was aborted. 1.
[1972] 1 QB 60. See also Lloyd v Stanbury [1971] 1 WLR 535.
2.
In Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64; 104 ALR 1 the High Court disagreed with Lord Denning MR’s view that a plaintiff is entitled (or required) to elect between reliance and expectation loss.
3.
(1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151 (see [35-08]).
4.
See CCC Films (London) Ltd v Impact Quadrant Films Ltd [1985] QB 16.
5.
See [30-33].
6.
Ogle v Comboyuro Investments Pty Ltd (1976) 136 CLR 444 at 450; 9 ALR 309.
7.
See [36-13]–[36-17].
8.
See [36-04].
9.
See [36-05].
10.
See [36-16].
11.
See [30-33].
12.
See [35-14].
13.
Cf SIB International SRL v Metallgesellschaft Corp (The Noel Bay) [1989] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 361 (breach followed by repudiation).
14.
Millet v Van Heck & Co [1920] 3 KB 535 at 542–3.
15.
Melachrino v Nickoll [1920] 1 KB 693 at 699.
16.
[1979] AC 91. See further [36-06].
17.
The Hong Kong equivalent to s 53(2) of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW) (see [35-42]) was applied. However, since the date was, in effect, the time when the goods ought to have been delivered the same result would have flowed from application of s 53(3).
18.
See W E D Davies, ‘Anticipatory Breach and Mitigation of Damages’ (1960–62) 5 UWALR 576; M G Bridge, ‘Mitigation of Damages in Contract and the Meaning of Avoidable Loss’ (1989) 105 LQR 398.
19.
Garnac Grain Co Inc v HMF Faure & Fairclough Ltd [1968] AC 1130n at 1140.
20.
Kaines (UK) Ltd v Osterreichische Warrenhandelsgesellschaft Austrowaren Gesellschaft mbH [1993] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 1.
21.
Melachrino v Nickoll [1920] 1 KB 693 at 697.
22.
[1919] 2 KB 581.
23.
[1919] 2 KB 581 at 589.
24.
M G Bridge, ‘Mitigation of Damages in Contract and the Meaning of Avoidable Loss’ (1989) 105 LQR 398 at 418.
25.
[1983] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 605.
26.
[1981] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 574 at 580.
27.
See [29-12].
28.
[1982] Ch 197. See also [35-39].
29.
Because the writ was issued prior to the completion date, damages were awarded in substitution for specific performance.
30.
See, eg London Chatham and Dover Railway Co v South Eastern Railway Co [1893] AC 429; Shevill v Builders Licensing Board (1982) 149 CLR 620 at 637; 42 ALR 305; Norwest Refrigeration Services Pty Ltd v Bain Dawes (WA) Pty Ltd (1984) 157 CLR 149 at 162; 55 ALR 509; President of India v La Pintada Compania Navigacion SA [1985] AC 104.
31.
The rate must not be penal. See [37-07]–[37-17].
32.
See, eg Supreme Court Act 1970 (NSW), s 94.
33.
Trans Trust SPRL v Danubian Trading Co Ltd [1952] 2 QB 297.
34.
[1952] 2 QB 297 at 306. See also Wenham v Ella (1972) 127 CLR 454 at 463.
35.
See Wadsworth v Lydall [1981] 1 WLR 598 (approved President of India v La Pintada Compania Navigacion SA [1985] AC 104). See F A Mann, ‘On Interest, Compound Interest and Damages’ (1985) 101 LQR 30.
36.
(1854) 9 Ex 341 at 354; 156 ER 145 at 151.
37.
(1989) 171 CLR 125; 84 ALR 119. Contrast Pooraka Holdings Pty Ltd v Participation Nominees Pty Ltd (1991) 58 SASR 184. Cf F A Pidgeon & Son Pty Ltd v Danehurst Investments Pty Ltd [1986] 1 Qd R 448.
38.
See also Sanrod Pty Ltd v Dainford Ltd (1984) 54 ALR 179 at 191.
39.
See also Sempra Metals Ltd (formerly Metallgesellschaft Ltd) v Inland Revenue Commissioners [2008] 1 AC 561; [2007] UKHL 34.
40.
See Hobartville Stud Pty Ltd v Union Insurance Co Ltd (1991) 25 NSWLR 358 at 364.
41.
[1988] AC 395 at 425.
42.
See generally [37-07]–[37-17].
43.
See [35-03].
44.
[1909] AC 488 (see [35-03]).
45.
[1977] VR 447.
46.
(1875) LR 10 QB 111.
47.
See also Boncristiano v Lohmann [1998] 4 VR 82 at 94; Johnson v Gore Wood & Co (A firm) [2002] 2 AC 1 at 49.
48.
(1875) LR 10 QB 111 at 122.
49.
[1976] 3 All ER 161. See also Watts v Morrow [1991] 1 WLR 1421 (see M P Furmston (1993) 6 JCL 64).
50.
See Coote, Contract — An Underview, 1995, p 25. See also Farley v Skinner [2002] 2 AC 732 at 746, 767, 770.
51.
[1987] ICR 700.
52.
(1993) 176 CLR 344; 111 ALR 289 (see [36-09]).
53.
[1987] ICR 700 at 718 per Dillon LJ.
54.
[1976] 1 QB 446. See also Perry v Sidney Phillips & Son [1982] 1 WLR 1297; Calabar Properties Ltd v Stitcher [1984] 1 WLR 287. Cf Thake v Maurice [1986] QB 644.
55.
[1973] 1 QB 233. See also Wings Ltd v Ellis [1985] AC 272 at 287. For an early Australian authority see Athens-MacDonald Travel Service Pty Ltd v Kazis [1970] SASR 264 where Zelling J awarded damages for disappointment, discomfort and inconvenience against a travel agency.
56.
It was unnecessary to decide whether statements made by the defendants in their brochures were terms or representations because the Misrepresentation Act 1967 (UK) (see [18-76]) provided a remedy in damages even if there was no breach of contract. The principle applies to claims in tort. See Archer v Brown [1985] QB 401; Dillon v Charter Travel Co Ltd (1989) 92 ALR 331; Graham v Voigt (1989) 89 ACTR 11. See also [19-13] (damages for breach of statutory prohibition on misleading and deceptive conduct).
57.
(1993) 176 CLR 344. See Elizabeth Macdonald, ‘Contractual Damages for Mental Distress’ (1994) 7 JCL 134; Jane Swanton (1993) 67 ALJ 379; Stuart Hetherington [1993] LMCLQ 289.
58.
See, eg Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1993) 176 CLR 344 at 362.
59.
See Farley v Skinner [2002] 2 AC 732 at 750, 755.
60.
[1928] 1 KB 269.
61.
[1928] 1 KB 269 at 281.
62.
[1930] AC 209.
63.
See Ewan McKendrick, ‘Promises to Perform: How Valuable?’ (1992) 5 JCL 6; Brian Coote, ‘Contract Damages, Ruxley and the Performance Interest’ [1997] CLJ 537; F H Loke, ‘Cost of Cure or Difference in Market Value? Toward a Sound Choice in the Basis for Quantifying Expectation Damages’ (1996) 10 JCL 189.
64.
See Tabcorp Holdings Ltd v Bowen Investments Pty Ltd (2009) 236 CLR 272 at 285–6; 253 ALR 1 at 6; [2009] HCA 8 at [13]. See Anthony Papamatheos, (2009) 125 LQR 397; Solène Rowan, [2009] CLJ 276.
65.
(1954) 90 CLR 613. See also Perry v Sidney Phillips & Son [1982] 1 WLR 1297 at 1301.
66.
See, eg [35-38].
67.
See Harbutt’s ‘Plasticine’ Ltd v Wayne Tank and Pump Co Ltd [1970] 1 QB 447 (overruled on another point Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827).
68.
(1954) 90 CLR 613.
69.
(1954) 90 CLR 613 at 620.
70.
(1954) 90 CLR 613 at 618–19. See also Tabcorp Holdings Ltd v Bowen Investments Pty Ltd (2009) 236 CLR 272 at 288–9; 253 ALR 1 at 7; [2009] HCA 8 at [17].
71.
Reference was made to the expression of the qualification in terms of a concept of ‘economic waste’ in the Restatement of the Law of Contracts (1932), §346. But the High Court preferred to use expressions such as ‘necessary’ and ‘reasonable’ so as not to deny a building owner ‘the right to demolish a structure which, though satisfactory as a structure of a particular type, is quite different in character from that called for by the contract’. See (1954) 90 CLR 613 at 619. See also Parramatta City Council v Lutz (1988) 12 NSWLR 293 at 335. In the Restatement (2d) Contracts (1979), §348, com c the expression ‘economic waste’ is described as ‘misleading’.
72.
Contrast Pantalone v Alaouie (1989) 18 NSWLR 119 (tort).
73.
[1996] AC 344 (see Gerard McMeel [1995] LMCLQ 356; Janet O’Sullivan [1995] CLJ 496; Jane Swanton and Barbara McDonald (1996) 70 ALJ 444; Jill Poole (1996) 59 MLR 272).
74.
See Radford v De Froberville [1978] 1 All ER 33, a case which (wrongly) treats the plaintiff’s intention to reinstate the property as a major consideration.
75.
Cf Ruxley Electronics and Constructions Ltd v Forsyth [1996] AC 344 at 360.
76.
See J W Carter, ‘The Effect of Discharge of a Contract on the Assessment of Damages for Breach or Repudiation’ (1988) 1 JCL 113 and 249; B R Opeskin, ‘Damages for Breach of Contract Terminated Under Express Terms’ (1990) 106 LQR 293.
77.
McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 477; Financings Ltd v Baldock [1963] 2 QB 104 at 121.
78.
Larratt v Bankers and Traders Insurance Co Ltd (1941) 41 SR (NSW) 215 at 225; Hyundai Heavy Industries Co Ltd v Papadopoulos [1980] 1 WLR 1129 at 1141.
79.
Ettridge v Vermin Board of the District of Murat Bay [1928] SASR 124 at 128; Hyundai Heavy Industries Co Ltd v Papadopoulos [1980] 1 WLR 1129 at 1136. An accrued right to damages is not divested on termination by frustration; see [34-07].
80.
Cf Lombard North Central Plc v Butterworth [1987] 1 QB 527 at 535 (loss of opportunity to receive performance).
81.
Sunbird Plaza Pty Ltd v Maloney (1988) 166 CLR 245; 77 ALR 205. Cf Couglin v Blair 262 P 2d 305 at 311 (1953); Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827 at 849.
82.
See [36-04].
83.
[1985] 1 Qd R 253.
84.
Cf Buchanan v Byrnes (1906) 3 CLR 704 at 715; Sunbird Plaza Pty Ltd v Maloney (1988) 166 CLR 245 at 260.
85.
See [30-17].
86.
See [35-40], [35-42].
87.
See [37-17]. The agreed damages provision may, of course, be in another term of the contract.
88.
See generally J W Carter, ‘Termination Clauses’ (1990) 3 JCL 90.
89.
(1982) 149 CLR 620. See also Yeoman Credit Ltd v Waragowski [1961] 1 WLR 1124; Financings Ltd v Baldock [1963] 2 QB 104.
90.
The claim was in fact brought against a guarantor, but this was said to make no difference to the analysis.
91.
See, eg Progressive Mailing House Pty Ltd v Tabali Pty Ltd (1985) 157 CLR 17; 57 ALR 609.
92.
See, eg Lombard North Central Plc v Butterworth [1987] 1 QB 527; Citicorp Australia Ltd v Hendry (1985) 4 NSWLR 1 at 28–9; Gumland Property Holdings Pty Ltd v Duffy Bros Fruit Market (Campbelltown) Pty Ltd (2008) 234 CLR 237 at 259; 244 ALR 1 at 18; [2008] HCA 10 at [58].
93.
(1985) 157 CLR 17 (see J W Carter and J Hill, ‘Repudiation of Leases: Further Developments’ [1986] Conv 262). See also Nangus Pty Ltd v Charles Donovan Pty Ltd [1989] VR 184. Cf W & J Investments Ltd v Bunting [1984] 1 NSWLR 331.
94.
See [37-17].
95.
(1941) 41 SR (NSW) 215.
96.
(1941) 41 SR (NSW) 215 at 225–6.
97.
[1983] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 605.
98.
[1983] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 605 at 607. See also J S Ziegel [1988] LMCLQ 276 at 279–80.
99.
See, eg Progressive Mailing House Pty Ltd v Tabali Pty Ltd (1985) 157 CLR 17 at 55; AMEV-UDC Finance Ltd v Austin (1986) 162 CLR 170 at 205–7, 216–20; 68 ALR 185.
100. See, eg Robophone Facilities Ltd v Blank [1966] 1 WLR 1428; W&J Investments Ltd v Bunting [1984] 1 NSWLR 331; Christopher Moran Holdings Ltd v Bairstow [2000] 2 AC 172 at 183–4. 101. See [35-16]. 102. See [34-07], [34-16], [34-24] (frustration). 103. See also [36-18]. Normally damages are assessed by reference to the plaintiff’s position on the assumption that the defendant’s breach had not occurred: Proctor & Gamble Philippine Manufacturing Corp v Kurt A Becher GmbH & Co KG [1988] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 21 at 28. 104. See [30-14]. 105. [1971] 1 QB 164. 106. See [30-33]. 107. Cf Reigate v Union Manufacturing Co (Ramsbottom) Ltd [1918] 1 KB 592 at 597, 602, 604, 607. 108. See Michael Furmston, ‘Actual Damages, Notional Damages and Loss of a Chance’ in Contract Damages Domestic and International Perspectives, eds Saidov and Cunnington, 2008, p 419; J W Carter and Elisabeth Peden, ‘Damages Following Termination for Repudiation: Taking Account of Later Events’ (2008) 24 JCL 145; Michael Mustill, ‘The Golden Victory — Some Reflections’ (2008) 124 LQR 569. 109. [2007] 2 AC 353; [2007] UKHL 12. See Jonathan Morgan, [2007] CLJ 263; Brian Coote, (2007) 123 LQR 503; Chris Nicoll, [2008] JBL 91; David Capper, (2008) 24 JCL 176. 110. (1872) LR 7 Ex 111 (see [30-37]). See also Synge v Synge [1894] 1 QB 466 (see [30-66]) where the defendant’s obligation to perform was contingent on the plaintiff not predeceasing him. 111. See the discussion in Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64 at 117, 122, 132, 144, 177. 112. [1984] 1 AC 382 at 392 (see G H Treitel, ‘Rights of Rejection Under CIF Sales’ [1984] LMCLQ 565; J W Carter (1985) 101 LQR 167). Cf [35-38]. 113. Abrahams v Herbert Reiach Ltd [1922] 1 KB 477 at 480; Biotechnology Australia Pty Ltd v Pace (1988) 15 NSWLR 130 at 156. See also Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64 at 91, 102, 133. 114. See Toprak Mahsulleri Ofisi v Finagrain Compagnie Commerciale Agricole et Financière SA [1979] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 98 at 110 (affirmed [1979] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 98 at 112). 115. [1971] 1 QB 164 (see [36-17]). See also Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64 at 95, 113, 132–3. 116. (1989) 16 NSWLR 130. Cf Santa Martha Baay Scheepvart v Scanbulk A/S (The Rijn) [1981] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 267 at 270. 117. See [35-17]. 118. (1951) 84 CLR 377 (see [35-11]). 119. Fink v Fink (1946) 74 CLR 127. 120. (1994) 179 CLR 332 at 349; 120 ALR 16. 121. [1911] 2 KB 786.
122. (1991) 174 CLR 64. 123. See (1991) 174 CLR 64 at 102. 124. (1990) 93 ALR 271 at 295 (reversed on other grounds (1992) 175 CLR 353; 109 ALR 57). 125. On this basis, damages for the loss of a chance may be recovered in claims in tort or for breach of statutory provisions such as s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law. See, eg Sellars v Adelaide Petroleum NL (1994) 179 CLR 332; Tabet v Gett (2010) 240 CLR 537 at 559; 265 ALR 227 at 239; [2010] HCA 12 at [47]. See also [18-69], [19-14]. 126. See Sellars v Adelaide Petroleum NL (1994) 179 CLR 332 at 355 per Mason CJ, Dawson, Toohey and Gaudron JJ. 127. (1927) 27 SR (NSW) 301. 128. (1927) 27 SR (NSW) 301 at 307 (Gordon and Campbell JJ concurred). 129. (1874) LR 7 HL 158. For more recent illustrations see Ray v Druce [1985] Ch 437; Seven Seas Properties Ltd v Al-Essa [1988] 1 WLR 1272. 130. [1987] 1 Ch 305 at 318. See also at 325. 131. See, eg Powys v Brown (1924) 25 SR (NSW) 65 at 74; Boardman v McGrath [1925] QWN 14. 132. There may be a statutory right to claim damages (see generally [18-76], [19-13]) or, possibly, a claim under the common law, in cases of negligence (see [18-65]). Query the position with regard to damages awarded under Lord Cairns’ Act (see [36-25]–[36-29]). 133. See Property Law Act 1974 (Qld), s 68(1) (see [36-22]); and see Law Reform Commission of Victoria, Sale of Land, Report No 20, 1989; NSW Law Reform Commission, Damages for Vendor’s Inability to Convey Good Title, LRC 64, 1990 and the discussion by Peter Butt, ‘The Gentle Demise of Bain v Fothergill’ (1991) 65 ALJ 285; J W Carter, ‘Reform of the Rule in Bain v Fothergill’ (1991) 4 JCL 230. See also Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989 (UK), s 3 (adopting Law Commission, Transfer of Land, The Rule in Bain v Fothergill, Law Com No 166, 1987). 134. Sharneyford Supplies Ltd v Edge [1987] 1 Ch 305 (see Charles Harpum [1987] CLJ 212). 135. [1980] Ch 52 (see David Hayton [1979] CLJ 35). See also Noske v McGinnis (1932) 47 CLR 563. 136. [1980] Ch 52 at 71. 137. [1974] Ch 30. 138. [1975] 1 NSWLR 512. See also Allison v Hewitt (1974) 3 DCR (NSW) 193. 139. See Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW), s 54B(3). 140. See Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW), s 54B(2). 141. [1956] AC 185. 142. Overruling Atlas Tiles Ltd v Briers (1978) 144 CLR 202; 21 ALR 129. 143. (1980) 146 CLR 1; 29 ALR 1 (overruled on another point MBP (SA) Pty Ltd v Gogic (1991) 171 CLR 657; 98 ALR 193). 144. For the position where the award is taxable see Gill v Australian Wheat Board [1980] 2 NSWLR 795. 145. Atlas Tiles Ltd v Briers (1978) 144 CLR 202 at 236. 146. Atlas Tiles Ltd v Briers (1978) 144 CLR 202 (dissenting judgments). See also Parsons v BNM Laboratories Ltd [1964] 1 QB 95. 147. See British Transport Commission v Gourley [1956] AC 185 (tort); Pennant Hills Restaurants Pty Ltd v Barrell Insurances Pty Ltd (1981) 145 CLR 625 at 645; 34 ALR 162.
148. See O’Brien v McKean (1968) 118 CLR 540 (tort). 149. (1988) 166 CLR 351; 82 ALR 587. See also Nikolaou v Papasavas Phillips & Co (1988) 166 CLR 394; 82 ALR 617 (date when claim statute barred). 150. [1982] 1 WLR 1297 at 1301. 151. (1981) 145 CLR 625. And see Todorovic v Waller (1981) 150 CLR 402; 37 ALR 481. 152. See generally Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, paras 23-30–23-105. 153. 21 & 22 Vic c 27. 154. For the early history see P M McDermott, ‘Jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery to Award Damages’ (1992) 108 LQR 652. 155. SA: Supreme Court Act 1935, s 30; Tas: Supreme Court Civil Procedure Act 1932, s 11(13); Vic: Supreme Court Act 1986, s 38; WA: Supreme Court Act 1935, s 25(10). In Queensland it has been held that the repeal of the section in question does not affect the power to award damages in equity. Conroy v Lowndes [1958] Qd R 375. 156. See Cth: Judiciary Act 1903, ss 31, 32 (High Court); Federal Court of Australia Act 1976, ss 21–33 (Federal Court); ACT: Supreme Court Act 1933, ss 20, 25–34; NT: Supreme Court Act Pt IV (see Brooks v Wyatt (1994) 99 NTR 12). 157. Imposed by, or derived from, the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp), 29 Car II c 3; see generally Chapter 9. 158. See Price v Strange [1978] Ch 337. Cf Ellul v Oakes (1972) 3 SASR 377 at 395; and generally on part performance see [9-21]–[9-24]. 159. Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher (1988) 164 CLR 387; 76 ALR 513 (see [7-12]). 160. See, eg Johnson v Agnew [1980] AC 367 (see [36-28]); William Sindall Plc v Cambridgeshire County Council [1994] 1 WLR 1016 at 1037; Tilbury, Civil Remedies, 1990, Vol 1, para 3266. But cf Jaggard v Sawyer [1995] 1 WLR 269 (see [36-27]). 161. See generally [39-07]–[39-12]. 162. Compare Goldsbrough Mort & Co Ltd v Quinn (1910) 10 CLR 674 at 701 and J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey (1931) 45 CLR 282 at 295 with King v Poggioli (1923) 32 CLR 222 at 250. 163. (1982) 149 CLR 672 at 679; 42 ALR 69. 164. But see Norton v Angus (1926) 38 CLR 523 (see [36-26]). 165. See, eg Price v Strange [1978] Ch 337 at 358; Madden v Kevereski [1983] 1 NSWLR 305; McMahon v Ambrose [1987] VR 817 at 842, 848. Cf Tilbury, Civil Remedies, 1990, Vol 1, para 3260. 166. See, eg McMahon v Ambrose [1987] VR 817. 167. (1926) 38 CLR 523. 168. (1926) 38 CLR 523 at 530. 169. [1977] 2 All ER 647. 170. See further [36-29]. 171. [1995] 1 WLR 269. 172. Cf Oakacre Ltd v Claire Cleaners (Holdings) Ltd [1982] Ch 197 (see [36-06]). 173. [1973] 1 WLR 1406. It may be that Goff J was wrong to accept that the purchaser’s damages were limited to the difference between the value of the property and the purchase price; see P H Pettit (1974) 90 LQR 297.
174. See [35-15]. 175. [1974] Ch 30. See also Malhotra v Choudhury [1980] Ch 52 (date of judgment); Suleman v Shahsavari [1988] 1 WLR 1181 (date of hearing). Cf Grant v Dawkins [1973] 1 WLR 1406 (see [3627]). 176. [1980] AC 367. 177. [1983] 1 NSWLR 305. 178. See ASA Constructions Pty Ltd v Iwanov [1975] 1 NSWLR 512. 179. The leave of the court must be sought. See [31-07]. 180. [1980] AC 367. See also Attorney-General v Blake [2001] 1 AC 268 at 281. 181. A similar view had been expressed by O’Bryan J in McKenna v Richey [1950] VLR 360 at 376. But see Madden v Kevereski [1983] 1 NSWLR 305 at 306–7; and cf Wenham v Ella (1972) 127 CLR 454 at 460.
[page 874]
Chapter 37
Recovery of Sums Fixed by the Contract [37-01] Debt and damages.1 The action to recover a debt due for payment has a longer history than the action to recover damages for breach of contract.2 Moreover, although the distinction between debt and damages is less important now than formerly, for two main reasons it is still significant. First, there are procedural advantages in recovering a sum payable as a debt due.3 Generally, a plaintiff can invoke a procedure under which judgment can be obtained with a minimum of supporting evidence. A writ is issued specifying the amount claimed and advising the defendant that judgment will be signed by default if the defendant fails to defend the matter. By contrast, if a plaintiff wishes to recover more than a nominal sum by way of damages, the plaintiff must often produce detailed evidence of loss, which may include evidence of market values and so on.4 There is also a difference in the onus of proof. Where a plaintiff alleges that a debt is due, but the defendant denies this and pleads a defence of payment, the onus is on the defendant.5 On the other hand, a plaintiff who seeks damages for breach bears the onus of proving the breach and the loss in respect of which compensation is sought.6 It was also explained earlier that a plea of tender may answer, that is, provide a defence to, the claim that there was a breach on the part of the defendant,7 but the plea of tender is not a defence to a claim for a contract debt.8 Second, the High Court explained in Young v Queensland Trustees Ltd9 the common law: does not and never did conceive of indebtedness in a sum certain for an executed consideration as a mere breach of contract: it is rather the
[page 875]
detention of a sum of money and that was so whether the creditor enforced his demand by an action of debt or by indebitatus assumpsit.
This means, for example, that the rules dealing with the mitigation of loss are not relevant where the plaintiff is seeking to recover a debt due under the contract, whereas they are frequently relevant to an action for damages. [37-02] Characteristics of liquidated sums . In the present context a liquidated sum has two essential characteristics: (1) it is fixed by the contract; and (2) it is due for payment by the defendant.10 Where the sum is not due for payment it cannot usually be recovered as a debt due. Unless there is a clause accelerating the time for payment11 applicable to the events which have occurred, or the contract has been terminated for breach or repudiation by the defendant,12 the plaintiff must wait until the payment actually falls due.13 The idea that a debt has fallen due for payment usually assumes that it has been earned by the plaintiff, by performance of the contract. If the parties have agreed that the payment must be earned, the fact that a breach on the part of the defendant has prevented performance by the plaintiff does not permit the plaintiff to ignore the requirement of performance.14 On the other hand, once the payment has been earned, the fact that the performance of the contract is terminated by the plaintiff on account of the defendant’s breach does not divest the plaintiff of the cause of action.15 The defendant may, however, be entitled to set off that claim against the plaintiff ’s claim.16 In some cases a plaintiff who looks to have earned the right to recover a sum fixed by the contract will be restricted to a claim for damages because the defendant has prevented the occurrence of the event on which the obligation to pay depends. For example, in Alpha Trading Ltd v Dunnshaw-Patten Ltd17 an agency agreement provided for the payment of commission out of the proceeds of a contract of sale entered into by the principals with buyers introduced by the agents. The principals breached the contract of sale and did not receive payment. It was held by the English Court of [page 876] Appeal that the principals had breached an implied term of the agency contract.
Therefore, although there was no entitlement to claim the sum fixed by the contract as a debt, they were entitled to damages which, on the facts, were equal to the commission which the principals had agreed to pay.18
Claims for Liquidated Sums [37-03] Nature of the action . Historically, the action to recover a liquidated sum under the contract was framed at common law in debt. The disappearance of the ‘forms of action’,19 and the fusion of law and equity, makes it a little anachronistic to speak today of an action ‘in debt’. Nevertheless, it remains true that an action to recover a contract debt due is not a claim for breach of contract. Nor does it involve specific performance of the contract. Therefore, the claim is not subject to the exercise of a judicial discretion in favour of the plaintiff based on equitable considerations.20 For example, where a seller of goods recovers the price due under the contract, the order of the court is not one for specific performance. This means that discretionary considerations applicable to claims for specific performance, such as laches, are not relevant. In some cases an order for specific performance may lead to the recovery of a liquidated sum.21 For example, if the court orders specific performance of a contract for the sale of land, the order will oblige the purchaser to pay the contract price. However, recovery of the liquidated sum is here merely an incident of the decree. [37-04] Illustrating the debt/damages distinction . A good illustration of the distinction between debt and damages is a seller’s action to recover the price of goods sold to a buyer. Under s 51(1) of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW),22 the seller may recover the price once property has passed to a buyer who has refused to pay for the goods according to the terms of the contract. The requirement that property must have passed emphasises the importance of performance by the seller. The Act draws a clear distinction between this situation and the seller’s cause of action for damages where property has not passed to the buyer but the buyer refuses to accept delivery of the goods.23 In practice, the seller’s right to receive the price depends, almost invariably, on performance of the contract. However, under s 51(2) of the [page 877]
Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW),24 if the price is payable on a ‘day certain irrespective of delivery’ the seller can sue for the price, assuming that the day certain has passed, even though property has not been transferred to the buyer. Here the seller’s right to the price does not depend on the seller’s performance of the contract. However, the day certain must be fixed by the contract and not leftto be determined by later events.25 [37-05] Entire contracts . Full performance of an entire contract will lead to the recovery of a liquidated sum, that is, the contract price. Moreover, in most cases substantial performance of the contract will have this effect, subject to the right of the other party to claim damages.26 [37-06] Instalment payments . Contracts frequently provide for the payment of money by instalments. For example, A might lend $1000 to B and B might promise to pay a specified amount, say $110 per month, for 10 months. Another form of instalment payment is found in severable contracts.27 For example, a buyer may agree to pay a specified amount for each delivery made by the seller under an instalment goods contract. Other examples can be found in leases, time charterparties, and so on, where the contract fixes an amount to be paid at specified intervals. In respect of these contracts the plaintiff is able to recover each instalment payment, as a debt, when it falls due for payment.28 Two features of contracts which provide for instalment payments deserve emphasis. First, the plaintiff may sue for and recover each payment as it falls due without waiting for all payments to become due. Even if the defendant has repudiated all liability under the contract, the plaintiff is not conceived as ‘splitting’ a cause of action by claiming each payment as it falls due. Accordingly, an action for one instalment does not bar a subsequent claim in respect of a later instalment. Second, in the absence of a clause accelerating payment, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover future payments as debts due. If the defendant commits a serious breach, or repudiates the contract, and the plaintiff terminates the performance of the contract, instalments which had not fallen due for payment can only be recovered as damages. The defendant’s conduct does not bring forward the time for payment and the court will discount an award of damages for future payments to take account of premature recovery.29 [page 878]
Agreed Damages Clauses30 General [37-07] Liquidated damages distinguished from penalty . The function of an agreed damages clause is to overcome a problem referred to earlier,31 namely, the requirement of proof of loss in a claim for damages. If damages have been liquidated by the parties, there is no requirement that the plaintiff prove loss or damage, and recovery of compensation is thereby facilitated. In Boucaut Bay Co Ltd v The Commonwealth32 Isaacs ACJ said that an agreed damages clause serves its function by being an ‘admitted … pre-assessment’. That being the case, unless the defendant denies that the contract has been breached, the clause fixes the amount recoverable by the plaintiff without the need for litigation.33 Subject to statute,34 such clauses are enforceable. However, some agreed damages clauses have a different function, that of fixing a sum which is payable as a penalty for breach. Such a sum is not fixed as a genuine pre-estimate of loss or damage but is stipulated ‘as in terrorem’35 of the defendant. Such clauses are not enforceable. The basis for the rule has been debated. From a common law perspective, as a restriction on freedom of contract it is understood as based on public policy.36 However, in Andrews v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd37 the High Court said that equitable principles also play a role. Two issues arise in relation to the distinction between liquidated damages and penalties: (1) Having regard to the nature of the clause, and the circumstances in which it is activated, is the clause one to which the distinction applies? (2) Assuming that the distinction applies, is the clause to be classified as a valid and enforceable liquidated damages provision, or an invalid and unenforceable penalty? [37-08] Time and basis for classification . An agreed damages clause must be classified, as either a penalty or a liquidated damages clause, by [page 879]
reference to the circumstances which existed at the time the contract was entered into, rather than at the time of breach.38 The basis for classification is usually said to be the ‘construction’ of the contract.39 However, as Deane J pointed out in O’Dea v Allstates Leasing System (WA) Pty Ltd,40 the question of construction must be determined as a matter of ‘substance’ rather than form, and on the basis of the ‘operation’ of the clause rather than the objective intention of the parties.41 The onus of proving that the clause is a penalty rests on the defendant.42 [37-09] Description by the parties . Where the parties have described the sum payable as a ‘penalty’ or ‘liquidated damages’, this may create a presumption in favour of that classification, but it is not conclusive.43 For example, in Clydebank Engineering and Shipbuilding Co Ltd v Don Jose Ramos Yzquierdo y Castaneda44 the Clydebank Engineering Co agreed to build four torpedo boats and to deliver them within various periods specified by the contract. It was expressly provided that in the event of ‘later delivery’ the ‘penalty’ was to be ‘at the rate of £500 per week for each vessel not delivered by the contractors in the contract time’. The vessels were a number of weeks late and £500 was claimed for each week in reliance on the express provision. It was held by the House of Lords that the clause was not accurately described as a penalty, but was in effect a provision for the payment of a liquidated sum. On the other hand, there are many examples of cases in which a payment described as ‘damages’ has been construed as a penalty.45 [37-10] Effect of termination.46 The fact that the performance of the contract has been terminated, and the parties discharged from the obligation to perform their contractual duties, does not itself prevent the operation of an agreed damages clause.47 This can be justified on the basis that the clause is intended to regulate the rights and liabilities of the parties on breach. Alternatively, the clause quantifies the defendant’s secondary obligation to pay compensation. It was explained earlier48 that terms regulating rights and liabilities generally survive termination because this is presumed to be the intention of the parties. And the (quantified) secondary [page 880] obligation to pay damages, unlike the parties’ primary obligations, is not
discharged by termination.49 Termination does, however, create two difficulties. (1) It is more difficult to quantify in advance the liability of the defendant following termination.50 (2) There may be an additional obstacle for the plaintiff to overcome, namely, the possibility of the court granting relief against forfeiture in favour of the defendant.51 [37-11] Effect of clause being penalty . Five questions are raised by the interpretation of the agreed damages clause as a penalty. First, is the plaintiff able to claim damages under the general law? Where a clause is construed as a penalty the plaintiff is able to claim damages for breach of contract.52 Of course, it will be necessary for the plaintiff to produce evidence of loss or damage since otherwise the plaintiff will be restricted to a nominal sum.53 Second, is the clause void for all purposes, even in relation to breaches in respect of which the clause would not have been construed as a penalty? In Pigram v Attorney-General (NSW)54 Barwick CJ explained that a term which is a penalty vis à vis one type of breach is unenforceable in respect of a breach the damages for which have been genuinely pre-estimated by the clause. This emphasises that the decision is not based on the particular breach or breaches on which the plaintiff ’s claim is based.55 It may also provide a reason for having more than one agreed damages clause.56 Third, is the plaintiff entitled to sue on the clause to the extent that it is valid? It might be implied from the description of the invalid penalty clause as being unenforceable or void57 that it cannot be sued upon at all. In fact, there is considerable authority for saying that the clause is enforceable to the extent of its validity.58 Whether this is still the law is, however, largely a theoretical issue since, as Nicholls LJ said in Jobson v Johnson,59 a penalty clause is ‘in practice a dead letter’. The cold reality for the plaintiff is that general damages must be sought and proved. The fourth question, which arises when damages are claimed under the general law, is whether the amount fixed by the penalty is relevant to the assessment of the claim. For example, is it evidence of the intention of the parties with respect to the amount contemplated as the plaintiff ’s loss? The general answer is that the clause is not relevant.60 Thus, in AMEV-UDC
[page 881] Finance Ltd v Austin61 a contract for the lease of certain printing equipment stated that on default in the payment of rent, the lessor could terminate the contract and recover the whole unpaid balance of the total rent. This was a penalty62 and the lessor was relegated to its common law right to damages, which it sought to have assessed on a loss of bargain basis. However, a majority of the High Court, applying common law principles,63 had no hesitation in saying that such damages were not recoverable. For the majority, the minor nature of the breach meant that there was no causal connection between the breach and the loss suffered. The fact that the parties had indicated by their agreed damages clause that a substantial sum would be payable had to be ignored. However, Deane J (dissenting) considered that the clause could be enforced to the extent that it allowed recovery of damages for loss of the bargain. And Dawson J, who also dissented, said that the clause could not be ignored for the simple reason that it was indicative that the parties did not intend a purely nominal sum to be recovered. There is much to be said for the views of the minority in Austin. Fifth, does the clause, although invalid, constitute the upper limit of the defendant’s liability? It may be that the preferred answer to this question is that the penalty does not operate to limit an award under the common law.64 However, the High Court has indicated that the question awaits authoritative resolution.65
Factors to be Considered [37-12] Magnitude of payment. It has never been the law that the mere fact that a clause stipulates for payment of a sum which exceeds what would be recoverable under common law principles governing the award of damages is enough to indicate that the sum is penal. In Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v New Garage and Motor Co Ltd66 Lord Dunedin said that the clause will be a penalty ‘if the sum stipulated for is extravagant and unconscionable in amount in comparison with the greatest loss that might conceivably be proved to have followed from the breach’. He referred to an example, given by Lord Halsbury LC in Clydebank Engineering and Shipbuilding Co Ltd v Don Jose Ramos Yzquierdo y Castaneda,67 of a builder
who promises to build a house for £50, but agrees to pay a million pounds on breach of the contract. As Lord Halsbury said, the ‘extravagance’ would be at once apparent. Although the example is an extreme one, it does suggest that the concern is with bona fide, rather than accurate, assessments, so that only where the amount recoverable is [page 882] manifestly in excess of what might be expected to be recoverable under common law principles should the sum be regarded as penal. This approach was recently affirmed by the High Court in Ringrow Pty Ltd v BP Australia Pty Ltd.68 In that case Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Kirby, Hayne, Callinan and Heydon JJ approved a statement by Mason and Wilson JJ in AMEV-UDC Finance Ltd v Austin69 that ‘an agreed sum is only characterized as a penalty if it is out of all proportion to damage likely to be suffered as a result of breach’. Nevertheless, it seems clear that where the pre-estimation of damages is straightforward, the requirement that the pre-estimate be ‘genuine’ may leave little room for application of the ‘out of all proportion’ criterion.70 The hallmark of a genuine pre-estimate of loss is one which may operate to the benefit of either party. A valid agreed damages clause may in practice operate to the defendant’s advantage, since the amount fixed may be less than the amount which would have been recoverable under damages rules. Thus, in Cellulose Acetate Silk Co Ltd v Widnes Foundry (1925) Ltd71 contractors agreed to pay to the purchasers of an acetone recovery plant the sum of £20 per week ‘by way of penalty’ if the plant was not erected and delivered within a specified period. The contractors were 30 weeks late in finishing the work. Although the delay was likely to cause damage in excess of £20 per week, the House of Lords said that the clause provided the maximum amount for which the contractors could be held liable and it was therefore enforceable as a liquidated damages clause. [37-13] Nature of the defendant’s obligation. It is relevant to consider the nature of the defendant’s obligations under the contract, and in particular whether the agreed damages clause comes into operation on the failure to pay a sum of money. In Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v New Garage and Motor Co Ltd72 Lord Dunedin said the clause ‘will be held to be a penalty if the breach consists only in not paying a sum of money, and the sum stipulated is a sum
greater than the sum which ought to have been paid’. For example, if B owes A $100 payable on 1 March, a clause of the agreement providing for the payment of $1000 as damages for default in payment would clearly be a penalty.73 However, the fact that the law now permits the recovery of damages for the late payment of money to a much greater extent than at the time Dunlop was decided74 means that Lord Dunedin’s statement cannot be taken at face value. [37-14] Circumstances in which sum payable. The scope of the clause, that is, the circumstances in which it will apply and require the defendant to pay, is sometimes relevant to the distinction between liquidated damages and penalties. For example, in Pigram v Attorney [page 883] General (NSW)75 a teacher was granted financial assistance by the government to enable him to study at the University of New England. A deed was executed which obliged the defendant to pay ‘as and for liquidated damages’ the ‘cost incurred’ by the government in providing financial assistance, in the event of the defendant failing to resume his duties as a teacher. The High Court considered that there was a clear attempt to provide a pre-estimate of the damage likely to result from a breach on the defendant’s part because the clause was limited to a failure to resume duties. If it had also applied in the event of a failure to serve his employers ‘faithfully and diligently’ it would have been a penalty. Such an event would occur, if at all, after the resumption of service and be quite unrelated to the government’s expenditure in providing financial assistance. In Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v New Garage and Motor Co Ltd76 Lord Dunedin said77 that there is a ‘presumption (but no more)’ that the term ‘is a penalty “if a single sum is made payable … on the occurrence of one or more or all of several events, some of which may occasion serious and others but trifling damage”’. The facts of the Dunlop case provide an illustration of the rebuttal of the presumption. The plaintiffs manufactured motor tyres and sold them under terms which required the defendants, as purchasers: not to alter or tamper with the markings on tubes or tyre covers; not to sell or offer for sale at prices below list prices; not to supply goods to suspended customers of the plaintiffs or to exhibit the goods without their consent; and
not to export without the plaintiffs’ consent. The agreement further provided for the payment of £5 in respect of each and every ‘tyre, cover or tube sold or offered in breach of this agreement’. The House of Lords held that, having regard to the difficulty in assessing damages,78 the term was not a penalty. It was assumed that the stipulated sum applied to any breach of the agreement, but because the damage caused by any breach was of an uncertain nature the presumption was rebutted. [37-15] Difficulty in estimating loss. The consideration which formed the basis for the decision in Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v New Garage and Motor Co Ltd79 was that the damages for breach by the defendants would have been difficult to assess and the sum stipulated (£5) was not an extravagant preestimate of the plaintiffs’ loss. Lord Dunedin said:80 It is no obstacle to the sum stipulated being a genuine pre-estimate of damage, that the consequences of the breach are such as to make precise pre-estimation almost an impossibility. On the contrary, that is just the
[page 884] situation when it is probable that pre-estimated damage was the true bargain between the parties.
In Waterside Workers’ Federation of Australia v Stewart81 a bond between the Waterside Workers’ Federation of Australia and the Industrial Registrar of the Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration provided for the payment of £50 in the event of, among other things, a strike by two or more members of the Federation. The court said82 it would have been practically ‘impossible’ to calculate with any degree of certainty or accuracy the loss suffered by any of the plaintiffs on breach by the defendants. The sum was not extravagant and was therefore treated as providing for liquidated damages.83 Damages for delay are frequently difficult to assess, and this consideration therefore has particular relevance in that context.84
Scope of the Distinction85 [37-16] Penalty must generally be payable on breach. For a sum to be classified under the liquidated damages/penalty distinction, the event which triggers payment must generally be a breach of contract. However, in Andrews v
Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd86 the High Court held that sums which become payable on the occurrence of other events may in some cases fall within the distinction. That includes situations in which as a matter of substance a promise to pay money is collateral to another provision, in the sense of being security for the satisfaction of that other provision. The payment may be subject to the distinction even though the other provision is non-promissory in nature. But the distinction will not apply if it is impossible to quantify reliably the loss which would be suffered on failure of the non-promissory provision. Nor will it be applicable if the payment obligation is referable to the performance of a service by the other party. That the sum need not be payable exclusively was established by Bridge v Campbell Discount Co Ltd,87 where the defendant acquired possession of a motor car pursuant to a hire-purchase contract with the plaintiffs, but found himself unable to meet his obligations under the agreement. He communicated this to the plaintiffs, saying that he was ‘very sorry’. He later returned the vehicle. Clause 9 of the contract provided for the payment, as ‘agreed compensation for depreciation’ of a sum equal to two-thirds of the hire-purchase price less the instalments paid by the hirer. Clause 9 operated if the agreement was for any reason terminated and the defendant contended that it provided for a penalty. The position was complicated by [page 885] cl 6, which deemed the provisions of cl 9 to apply if the hirer gave notice of early termination. Early termination was a right conferred on the hirer and would not involve a breach on his part. A majority of the House of Lords held that the hirer had not exercised his option of early termination under cl 6 and that the sum in question was payable, under cl 9, on breach by the defendant. Moreover, the House was unanimous in holding that the amount stipulated could not be regarded as a genuine pre-estimate of the plaintiffs’ loss. This was primarily because the amount described as ‘depreciation’ would become progressively less the longer the vehicle was used. In other words, the sliding scale went the wrong way. However, conflicting views were expressed on whether the distinction between penalties and liquidated damages would have applied had the defendant exercised his right of early termination under cl 6. The decision in Bridge was approved (and applied) by the High Court in
O’Dea v Allstates Leasing System (WA) Pty Ltd.88 However, it was unnecessary to consider which of the conflicting opinions expressed in Bridge should be applied in the event of termination without breach.89 Nor was the issue discussed in Andrews v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. The vast bulk of the cases on the distinction between liquidated damages and penalties have concerned agreed damages clauses in the form of promises to pay money. However, the distinction is also applicable to promises to confer nonmonetary benefits.90 [37-17] Acceleration clauses and loss of bargain damages. It is common for contracts for the lease of goods to contain terms which accelerate the payment of rent by the lessee on the occurrence of specified events. The terms vary somewhat and the distinction between liquidated damages and penalties may not apply to all such provisions. The leading case is O’Dea v Allstates Leasing System (WA) Pty Ltd,91 where Gibbs CJ said92 that the cases in which the distinction has been held not to apply fall into two classes. In the first, the contract provides for the payment of money by instalments and it is provided that the whole sum is to become payable immediately on the lessee’s failure to make punctual payment. The distinction does not apply if the contract created a ‘present debt, which, by reason of an indulgence given by the creditor, is payable either in the future, or in a lesser amount, provided that certain conditions are met’.93 [page 886] In the second, the parties have agreed that ‘a sum shall become payable on a certain event which, although brought about by the party required to make the payment, does not involve a breach of contract’.94 For example, the sum may be payable where a lessee of goods requests the lessor to retake possession. The distinction may not apply here because there is no breach. It may be, however, that in respect of the first class of case the lessee can apply for relief against forfeiture if deprived of the use of the goods. And the principles applicable to the second class of case are not entirely settled.95 O’Dea in fact illustrates that there is frequently room for debate on the application of the distinction between liquidated damages and penalties to an acceleration clause. The contract provided for the lease for a period of 36 months
of a ‘Mercedes Benz’ prime mover. Although cl 1(a) stated that the rent for the period of the lease was to be ‘due and payable’ by the lessee on the signing of the agreement, it permitted the lessee to pay the rent by instalments. Clause 6(a) contained a promise of due and punctual payment by the lessee. Clause 12 stated that, in the event of default in punctual payment, the lessor could retake possession without notice to the lessee and thereby terminate the lessee’s right to retention and use of the vehicle. Clause 12 further provided that all money due for ‘unexpired terms’ should ‘become immediately due and payable’ by the lessee, plus ‘reasonable costs of repossession’. On the same day as the lease was signed a guarantee of performance by the lessee was given by M G O’Dea Pty Ltd. When default occurred the vehicle was repossessed and sold. In proceedings against the lessee and the guarantor the claim was for the difference between the instalments paid and those payable under the agreement, together with interest and the costs of repossession. Alternatively, damages were claimed. It was conceded that the repossession costs were recoverable, but the defendants alleged that the other sum sought was a penalty. The court was unanimous in holding that the sum which the lessor sought was in the nature of a penalty. In the result the case was remitted to the Supreme Court of Western Australia for an assessment of the amount of damages recoverable by the plaintiffs. The decision illustrates that the law is excessively technical, and that anyone drafting an acceleration clause must be particularly astute.96 Subsequent cases97 confirm that recovery of instalment payments as damages will not be permitted after termination. However, an agreed damages clause which quantifies loss of bargain damages will be valid. For example, a contract for the lease of goods might say that the lessor can recover, as the difference between (1) the rental payable and (2) the sum of [page 887] rent paid, the value of the goods and a rebate which expresses an appropriate discount for early recovery of instalments.98 In one sense this is surprising. As a matter of strict logic such a clause ought to be invalid, because of the possibility that it will apply where only a minor breach on the part of the lessee leads to termination. But for the liquidated damages provision, in such a case a plaintiff would recover only a nominal sum as damages on termination.99 The
rationalisation for enforcing such clauses is that the court may take into account termination of the contract — and the consequent loss of bargain — notwithstanding that, in a claim for damages, the loss of the bargain would be regarded as having been caused by the election to terminate rather than the breach.100
Recovery after Election to Continue Performance101 Introduction [37-18] Right to continue performance. It was explained earlier102 that a breach or repudiation does not operate to terminate the performance of a contract automatically. If there is a right to terminate, the promisee may choose to exercise the right. However, as Jordan CJ said in Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd v Luna Park (NSW) Ltd,103 a ‘party by committing a breach of an essential promise cannot thereby compel the innocent party to put an end to the contract: the latter may go on with the performance of the contract if he chooses’. If follows that a plaintiff is not compelled to terminate the contract and claim damages for breach. The plaintiff may, at least in theory,104 continue to perform and earn the sum which the defendant had agreed to pay. [37-19] Recovery through specific performance. A plaintiff may be able to give substance to an election to continue performance by obtaining an order for specific performance. Thus, a vendor of land may elect to [page 888] continue performance, notwithstanding the purchaser’s breach of an essential time stipulation, and recover the contract price through a court order for specific performance. Although most frequently applied to such contracts, the remedy of specific performance is not restricted to contracts for the sale of land.105 It may, for example, be available to assist a plaintiff who has fully performed to recover a liquidated sum if the defendant has promised to make instalment payments.106
[37-20] The White and Carter case. In White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor107 the House of Lords pushed the two principles emphasised above, namely, (1) the distinction between debt and damages and (2) the plaintiff’s right to continue performance, to their logical, but (to some) objectionable, conclusion. The case concerned an advertising contract between White and Carter and McGregor, who owned a garage business at Clydebank. White and Carter agreed to advertise the business for 156 weeks. The contract obliged McGregor to pay a weekly sum and to make an annual payment towards the cost of the advertising plates which were to be placed on litter bins in fixed positions in Clydebank. McGregor purported to cancel the contract on the very day it was signed. He had no right to do so and the contract specifically stated that it was not subject to ‘countermand’. Now, White and Carter’s reaction was not, as might have been expected, to claim damages for breach. Instead, they manufactured the plates, advertised the business and claimed payments from McGregor. By the time the House of Lords delivered judgment in their favour, White and Carter had advertised the business for the full period.108 They therefore recovered the total of the sums which McGregor had agreed to pay under the contract. It was irrelevant, so the majority thought, to consider whether White and Carter had acted reasonably, as a plaintiff is not bound by any requirement of reasonableness when making an election.109 Nor was it relevant to consider whether they had mitigated their loss, because the claim was for a debt due under the contract, not damages.110 The decision in the White and Carter case was not well received, either by commentators111 or the courts. There is, however, nothing in the Australian cases to suggest that a contrary result would be reached here. And nothing turns on the fact that the White and Carter case was a Scottish appeal. Nevertheless, as will appear from the discussion below, in most situations the reasoning of the case will not be applicable. [page 889]
Position Where Co-operation Required [37-21] Effect of failure to co-operate. In White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor112 there was no requirement of co-operation between the parties,
since White and Carter could perform their obligations without McGregor’s assistance. All he had to do was to pay money. But it was recognised that where co-operation is required a plaintiff’s ability to claim the contract price depends on whether specific performance is available.113 Co-operation is required in a great many contracts to which the remedy of specific performance is not generally applicable. Chief among these are employment contracts and most contracts for the sale of goods or supply of services. In an employment contract the employee’s performance normally takes place at the employer’s place of business, and if the employer refuses to cooperate, and excludes the employee from the workplace, the employee will be unable to complete performance. Similarly, if a buyer refuses to accept goods the seller will usually be unable to make delivery. Again, where a contract for the supply of services requires co-operation, the supplier will usually be unable to earn the price of the services if cooperation is not forthcoming. What, then, is the effect of a failure to co-operate? In Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd v Luna Park (NSW) Ltd,114 Jordan CJ explained that where the: participation of the defaulting party is necessary to enable the innocent party to perform the contract on his part, and this participation is withheld, the innocent party is necessarily prevented and absolved from performance so long as the participation is withheld.
Therefore, although not in breach of contract by not performing, because the plaintiff has not earned the payment the plaintiff is not entitled to recover the sum which the defendant agreed to pay. Accordingly, the general rule in cases where co-operation is required is that the plaintiff is entitled to recover damages or restitution, if the failure to co-operate amounts to a breach of contract,115 but not the contract sum. For example, an employee who is prevented from working is not usually entitled to wages, and a supplier of goods or services who is prevented from making delivery or rendering the services is not entitled to the price of the goods or services.116 Of course, in all these cases the plaintiff is entitled to compensation. For example, a seller is entitled to recover the difference between the contract price and the market price if the buyer refuses to accept delivery of the goods. [page 890] At first sight Mackay v Dick117 appears to contradict the principles stated above. A contract for the sale of a machine required the machine to be put through
performance tests. The understanding of the parties was that if the machine did not perform satisfactorily the buyer would be under no liability to pay the price. As the buyer refused to co-operate with the seller the machine was not properly tested. Nevertheless, the House of Lords held that the buyer was liable to pay. The explanation for this decision is that the property in the goods had passed to the buyer by virtue of the contract.118 The requirement that the machine pass performance tests was simply a safeguard for the buyer. If the tests showed the machine to be unsatisfactory, title to the goods would have passed back to the seller and the buyer would not have been liable to pay. However, as the buyer prevented tests being carried out he could not take advantage of the contingency and his obligation to pay became absolute. [37-22] Scope of the co-operation limitation. In the situations considered above the co-operation required by the contract might be described as ‘active’. However, the co-operation concept may have a wider significance, and include what might be termed ‘passive’ co-operation. The expression has been used to describe cases in which the plaintiff must use the defendant’s land or goods in order to complete performance.119 The plaintiff will be able to complete performance if the defendant remains passive, and does not take steps to remove the plaintiff from the land or to obtain possession of the goods. However, a defendant who has repudiated the contract will usually have indicated to the plaintiff an intention not to remain passive. For example, the defendant may have revoked a contractual licence and barred the plaintiff’s entry to the land. In order for the plaintiff to complete performance the plaintiff must be in a position to prevent the defendant taking possession of the land or goods. The measure of the plaintiff’s ability to complete performance can then be expressed in terms of whether an injunction can be obtained to restrain the defendant from breaching the contract. Accordingly, and taking again the example of a contractual licence to enter land, the plaintiff will be unable to complete performance — and claim a liquidated sum under the contract — unless the court grants an injunction to the plaintiff.120
Absence of Legitimate Interest in Continuing Performance [37-23] Lord Reid’s statement. In White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor121 Lord Reid stated a limitation, which possibly applies to the
principles applied in that case, in the following terms: [page 891] It may well be that, if it can be shown that a person has no legitimate interest, financial or otherwise, in performing the contract rather than claiming damages, he ought not to be allowed to saddle the other party with an additional burden with no benefit to himself. If a party has no interest to enforce a stipulation, he cannot in general enforce it: so it might be said that, if a party has no interest to insist on a particular remedy, he ought not to be allowed to insist on it. And, just as a party is not allowed to enforce a penalty, so he ought not to be allowed to penalise the other party by taking one course when another is equally advantageous to him.
In the White and Carter case itself this limitation did not apply. As Lord Reid said,122 McGregor ‘did not set out to prove’ that White and Carter ‘had no legitimate interest in completing the contract and claiming the contract price rather than claiming damages’. By way of contrast, Lord Reid referred to the following hypothetical situation. Assume that a company commissions an expert (E) to go abroad to prepare a report but decides, prior to E’s departure, that the report will be of no value. Lord Reid said that if the company then repudiates its obligations, but E goes abroad and prepares the report, E might be denied the right to claim the promised payment as a debt due. However, it would be necessary for the company to prove that E had no legitimate interest in claiming the debt rather than damages. On such proof Lord Reid said that there might be a ‘proper case for the exercise of the general equitable jurisdiction of the court’.123 [37-24] Status of the legitimate interest concept. There appears to be no Australian decision in which the legitimate interest concept has been applied and its status in Australia is uncertain. Guidance on the legitimate interest concept can be found in the English cases, where the concept has been adopted as a restriction on a plaintiff’s right to recover the sum due under the contract after performance on his or her part. To some extent this is surprising. Lord Reid’s formulation was particularly tentative. Moreover, although he delivered one of the two majority speeches in White and Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor,124 it is difficult to reconcile with the opinion of Lord Hodson,125 who delivered the other majority speech (with which Lord Tucker agreed). Lord Hodson said that to deny a plaintiff who has fully performed the debt due under the contract would be to ‘introduce a novel equitable doctrine’ and make the ‘action for debt a claim for a discretionary remedy’. The English cases indicate that the onus of proof is on the defendant, who must establish that the plaintiff had no legitimate interest in claiming the
liquidated sum rather than damages.126 However, if the plaintiff [page 892] establishes a legitimate interest, such as the conversion of an unsecured claim to recover damages into a secured claim against property in the possession of the defendant, the plaintiff will obviously succeed in the action for the liquidated sum.127 Similarly, if it is established that termination of performance would damage the plaintiff’s commercial reputation, or expose the plaintiff to claims for damages by third parties, a legitimate interest will be present.128 Performance by the plaintiff may, for example, prevent the plaintiff breaching a related contract with another person. In other cases the courts have concentrated on the assessment of damages in respect of the plaintiff’s claim. Thus, in Gator Shipping Corp v Trans-Asiatic Oil Ltd SA (The Odenfeld)129 Kerr J said that the absence of any legitimate interest in continuing performance could not be established when the assessment of damages would have been extremely difficult. By way of contrast, in Attica Sea Carriers Corp v Ferrostaal Poseidon Bulk Reederei GmbH130 and Clea Shipping Corp v Bulk Oil International Ltd (The Alaskan Trader)131 an absence of any legitimate interest was established, mainly on the basis that there was no difficulty in assessing damages. One problem with these cases is that they provide little by way of doctrinal basis for the legitimate interest concept. Lord Reid drew an analogy with penalties, and invoked the court’s equitable jurisdiction when stating how the concept might be applied. But, if the plaintiff has earned the contract price, how is the sum agreed upon by the parties converted to a penalty? A penalty, as was explained earlier,132 is a sum payable on breach, and the amount payable by the defendant as the price of the plaintiff’s performance does not become due as the consequence of a breach of contract. And, if the concept is exercised according to equitable principles, more attention should be paid to whether the plaintiff has acted unconscionably in completing performance. This leads to two further difficulties. First, most of the cases have concerned time charterparties and it is doubtful whether the concept should be applied to such commercial contracts where certainty is so important. The House of Lords has warned of the dangers in applying equitable concepts to commercial contracts where it would engender uncertainty.133
Second, the English cases in effect deny the plaintiff the right to continue performance, rather than the remedy to which the plaintiff is otherwise entitled.134 The majority in the White and Carter case rejected the view that a plaintiff is bound to exercise the right to continue performance [page 893] reasonably, yet the effect of the subsequent decisions is to subject the right of election to some such requirement. Nevertheless, some qualification on the right of a party to continue to perform seems desirable. Whether it is best expressed in terms of ‘legitimate interest’ of the promisee, the ‘reasonableness’ of the promisee’s conduct or some other criterion may of course be debated. However, it would be inconsistent with the current concern to promote good faith in contract law to treat the promisee as having an unfettered right.135
Recovery after Termination136 General Points [37-25] Accrued right not divested. Where the performance of a contract is terminated the contract is not rescinded. As was explained earlier,137 this distinguishes termination for breach or repudiation, or by frustration, from rescission for misrepresentation or mistake. Because the contract is not rescinded, the accrued rights of the parties may remain enforceable after termination. The present concern is with a plaintiff’s accrued right to recover a sum fixed by the contract. [37-26] Time for recovery. A liquidated sum is recoverable after termination if the right to recover it from the defendant unconditionally accrued to the plaintiff prior to termination. As Dixon and Evatt JJ explained in Westralian Farmers Ltd v Commonwealth Agricultural Service Engineers Ltd:138 In general the termination of an executory agreement out of the performance of which pecuniary demands may arise imports that, just as on the one side no further acts of performance can be required, so, on the other side, no liability can be brought into existence if it depends upon a further act of performance. If the title to rights consists of vestitive facts which would result from the further
execution of the contract but which have not been brought about before the agreement terminates, the rights cannot arise. But if all the facts have occurred which entitle one party to such a right as a debt, a distinct chose in action which for many purposes is conceived as possessing proprietary characteristics, the fact that the right to payment is future or is contingent upon some event, not involving further performance of the contract, does not prevent it maturing into an immediately enforceable obligation.
This passage is also important because it indicates that an accrued right may exist in respect of a liquidated sum due for payment after termination. Thus, in the Westralian Farmers case itself, agents were entitled to recover the commission payable on the sale of certain tractors even though the performance of the contract with their principals terminated prior to the [page 894] time for payment. The contract provided for payment after the arrival of the tractors in Australia, and termination occurred while the goods were in transit. Because the commission had been earned, and payment was merely contingent on the arrival of the tractors, a majority of the court held that the commission could be recovered.139 The position would have been different had some further act of performance by the agents been required. Of course, the agents had to wait for the arrival of the tractors before bringing their action; termination did not bring forward the time for payment. [37-27] Position where contract frustrated. The position of a plaintiff with respect to liquidated sums due prior to termination by frustration was considered earlier.140
Termination Following Breach or Repudiation141 Introduction [37-28] Intention of the parties. Whether an accrued right exists in relation to a liquidated sum payable prior to termination depends on the intention of the parties as expressed by the contract. It is, therefore, an issue of construction. If the parties have expressly agreed that a sum is to remain payable after termination this expression of intention governs the rights of the parties subject
only to the restrictions considered later.142 Usually, however, the parties do not deal expressly with the recovery of liquidated sums after termination, and the court must decide what the parties, as reasonable persons, impliedly agreed on the matter. The court will have regard to three matters: (1) the terms of the contract; (2) the performance rendered by the plaintiff; and (3) the extent to which the plaintiff is discharged by termination.143 Dixon J explained in McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd144 that the right must have ‘unconditionally’ accrued to the plaintiff from the ‘partial execution’ of the contract. One way of testing whether a right to payment has unconditionally accrued is to consider whether the payment could be recovered by the payee in a claim for restitution on the basis of a total failure of consideration. [37-29] Contractual right to terminate. Where termination occurs pursuant to a contractual right, the parties are more likely to have [page 895] expressed an intention on the recovery of liquidated sums than if termination is based on a right implied by law. For example, a contract of hire (or lease) might provide that termination for breach by the hirer is to leave intact the hirer’s (or lessee’s) liability in respect of payments due prior to termination.145 The contract may, however, do no more than expressly preserve the plaintiff’s common law rights. This was the position in Hyundai Heavy Industries Co Ltd v Papadopoulos,146 which concerned a contract for the construction of a ship. The price was payable in instalments, representing agreed proportions of the total price, and due on dates specified by the contract. The builders agreed to design the vessel, to supply all necessary drawings, and to build, launch, equip and complete the vessel. The first payment due from the buyers was paid, but the second, representing 2.5 per cent of the purchase price, was not. The builders then exercised a contractual right to terminate and sought to recover the overdue payment from Papadopoulos and others who guaranteed the builders’ performance of the construction contract. The House of Lords was unanimous in holding that the guarantors were liable.147 The present concern, however, is with
the position of the buyers. Would the builders have been entitled to recover the overdue payment from the buyers? Three members of the House of Lords gave an affirmative answer to this question.148 They regarded the case as involving no more than the recovery of a sum which should have been paid prior to termination. It did not matter that the builders had produced no evidence of performance because the contract did not make their right to sue dependent on any performance by the builders. Their Lordships conceded that had the contract been simply one of sale the buyers would probably have had a defence based on failure of consideration.149 However, in their view the contract more closely resembled one for the provision of services,150 so that there was no total failure of consideration151 on termination even though no performance had been received by the buyers. Viscount Dilhorne went so far as to say that because the payment should have been made prior to termination the obligation to pay was not affected by termination. This is a little misleading. As Dixon J explained in McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd,152 it is the fact of partial execution, that is, performance, which gives rise to an accrued right. To take a fairly straightforward example, if A employs B under a contract of employment providing for monthly payments, but A repudiates his or her obligations, termination by B after a payment date does not preserve an accrued right to wages unless these were earned prior to termination. In the Hyundai case [page 896] the builders did not prove that they had performed, but the buyers may be taken to have admitted performance by not putting it in issue. Alternatively, the buyers’ obligation to pay may have been wholly independent of performance by the builders, which seems to have been the view applied by Viscount Dilhorne and Lord Edmund-Davies. There was, in other words, no total failure of consideration because the buyers had agreed to pay in return for a promise to perform (that is, to design the vessel), rather than in return for performance of the promise to supply the vessel. The views expressed in the Hyundai case were approved in another shipbuilding case, Stocznia Gdanska SA v Latvian Shipping Co.153 Six shipbuilding contracts were terminated by the builder for the buyer’s repudiation. The House of Lords held that Hyundai was applicable even though
there was no contract provision expressly preserving the builder’s rights following termination. The builders were thus held to be entitled to recover overdue instalments of the contract price which had been earned prior to termination. These represented the amounts due following completion of keel laying for two of the vessels to which the contracts related. [37-30] Recovery by party in breach. Any discussion of the recovery of liquidated sums after termination for breach or repudiation must necessarily concentrate on the position of the terminating party. However, termination does not divest the party in breach of a right to recover a liquidated sum, provided that it accrued unconditionally prior to termination.154 For example, where a seller has delivered conforming goods under an instalment goods contract, termination by the buyer after acceptance of a delivery does not preclude recovery by the seller of the price of the goods delivered, even though termination by the buyer was based on a repudiation by the seller.155 Similarly, an agent may be able to recover commission earned prior to termination of the agency relation for breach by the agent.156 Again, an employee may recover wages which accrued due prior to lawful dismissal.157
Recovery of the contract price [37-31] Contract price not generally recoverable. Generally, the contract price will not be recoverable as a liquidated sum after termination for the simple reason that it is unlikely to have been earned. For example, if a builder terminates the performance of a building contract for repudiation by the other party before the completion of the work, the builder will be restricted to the recovery of damages or restitution. If progress payments have been earned these may be recovered, but the balance, or the total price [page 897] if there is no provision for progress payments, will not be recoverable as a liquidated sum. And, if the contract specifies a date for payment of the price, the builder’s position is not improved merely by delaying termination until the date for payment has passed. There are three common law exceptions to the general rule stated above. First, if the contract price was earned prior to termination it will be recoverable. For
example, if a seller terminates a sale of goods contract after the price was earned by delivery of conforming goods, the seller can recover the price.158 However, generally speaking, a plaintiff who has fully performed does not terminate performance. Second, if the contract price is payable independently of performance, termination after the day when payment was due will not affect the plaintiff’s right of recovery. Such situations are, however, rare since most contracts make recovery of the price dependent on performance.159 Third, the contract may contain a clause accelerating payment in the event of termination. However, when activated by breach on the defendant’s part, acceleration clauses are usually subjected to the distinction between liquidated damages and penalties.160
Recovery of instalment payments [37-32] Hire and hire-purchase contracts, charterparties and leases. The feature common to hire and hire-purchase contracts is that the hirer agrees to make periodic payments for the use of goods. Termination for breach or repudiation on the part of the hirer does not remove any accrued liability to pay for use prior to termination, even if the goods have been repossessed by the owner. For example, in Brooks v Beirnstein,161 it was held that the hirer was liable for hire due prior to repossession, pursuant to a contractual right, on breach by the hirer. Bigham J said162 that the hirer had ‘enjoyed’ the use of the goods which was the ‘consideration for the rent’ and there was no reason ‘why he should not be liable to pay the arrears claimed’. The basis for recovery by a shipowner under a time charterparty is the enjoyment by the charterer of the services provided by the shipowner. Therefore, withdrawal of the vessel after the charterer has had the benefit of the services does not prevent recovery of the agreed hire as a liquidated sum.163 Accordingly, difficulty is only likely to arise in respect of a payment due prior to termination but covering, in whole or part, a later period.164 Leases frequently contain express provisions dealing with the recovery of rent after re-entry by the lessor.165 However, even without such a provision, [page 898]
the lessee’s liability to pay rent due prior to termination survives the lessor’s termination of the lease. The lessor may, therefore, recover the rent as a liquidated sum.166 Again, dispute is only likely to arise in respect of advance payments. [37-33] Employment and construction contracts. Whether an employee can recover wages after termination for breach or repudiation by the employer, for example, in wrongfully dismissing the employee, depends on a number of factors. At common law the time of termination is crucial. For example, if the employer agrees to pay wages monthly, and the employee terminates performance after six weeks, wages can be recovered in respect of the first month, but not the second.167 Wages for the first month are recoverable as a liquidated sum. Under statute the time of termination may not be crucial, and it is necessary to have regard to the possible application of the apportionment legislation and the employee’s rights under any applicable industrial award.168 Construction contracts frequently provide for progress payments and these are recoverable, even after termination, if the builder has completed a designated portion of the work.169 And Hyundai Heavy Industries Co Ltd v Papadopoulos170 and Stocznia Gdanska SA v Latvian Shipping Co171 illustrate that a shipbuilder may recover payments which were earned prior to termination of the contract even though the vessel is never completed. [37-34] Sale of goods. A contract for the sale of goods which requires the buyer to make instalment payments may take two forms. First, the contract may provide for the goods to be delivered by instalments and require the buyer to pay for each instalment on or after delivery. This creates few difficulties. If the seller terminates for breach or repudiation by the buyer, the seller is entitled to recover as a liquidated sum the price of all goods delivered to, and accepted by, the buyer. Second, the contract may provide for a single delivery but entitle the buyer to pay for the goods by instalments. Here termination will lead to difficulties unless title to the goods has passed to the buyer and the buyer retains the goods. If the seller terminates the contract and retakes possession of the goods there may be a total failure of consideration, which would be a good defence to the claim.172 And if property in the goods originally passed to the buyer, but is divested by the seller’s termination of the contract, there is an element of forfeiture which may also be a good defence.173
[page 899] [37-35] Sale of land. Where a contract for the sale of land provides for instalment payments of the price, the transfer of title to the land will usually be postponed until the final instalment is paid by the purchaser. An action to recover an overdue instalment payment can be based on the vendor’s promise to convey title.174 However, if the vendor terminates the contract prior to payment of the final instalment, the vendor’s right to recover an overdue instalment depends, in the first instance, on the terms of the contract. If it expressly provides that payment must be made, recovery is subject to the restrictions imposed by the court’s jurisdiction to grant relief against forfeiture.175 If the contract does not expressly provide for recovery, the decision in McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd176 applies unless the court can imply a right of recovery. In the Dennys Lascelles case it was said that termination causes a total failure of consideration, on which the purchaser is entitled to rely as a defence to any action to recover an overdue payment. The vendor may, of course, claim damages177 and also recover any deposit payment not paid by the purchaser.178
Recovery of deposit payments179 [37-36] Basis of recovery. A ‘deposit’ is a payment which the contract requires the defendant (‘payer’) to make, usually on entry into the contract, to signify genuineness. In this respect a deposit is a payment in earnest. Deposit payments also provide security for the plaintiff (‘payee’) in that the payee is entitled to keep (‘forfeit’) the payment if the contract goes off on account of the payer’s default under the contract. Where a contract provides for a deposit payment it will usually also contain express provisions for forfeiture. However, the payee’s right of forfeiture in the event of default is implied unless the contract contains an express provision to the contrary.180 Assuming that the deposit is not paid, but the payee subsequently terminates the performance of the contract for breach or repudiation on the part of the payer, the basis on which the deposit may be recovered as a liquidated sum is the express or implied right of forfeiture. In other words, the payer cannot be in a better position, by reason of not having paid the deposit, than if the deposit had
been paid.181 [page 900] A deposit payment usually bears a third characteristic, namely, that it represents a portion of the contract price which on completion of the contract is credited towards the contract price. The proportion will, in the context of a sale of land contract, usually be 10 per cent. Although this is a fairly small proportion, as a sum of money it is, in fact, frequently quite large. For example, contracts for the sale of land at a price in excess of $800,000 are quite common. Since a 10 per cent deposit amounts to more than $80,000, the forfeiture provision subjects the purchaser to a substantial financial risk. Moreover, the vendor’s right to forfeit the deposit does not depend on the purchaser’s breach having caused an equivalent loss. Therefore, it can be forfeited even if the vendor subsequently sells the property to a third party for a higher price than the first purchaser agreed to pay. [37-37] The authorities. The recovery of unpaid deposits has been considered in a number of authorities. It is, however, difficult to find any authoritative statement in favour of the views expressed above. In fact, there are three quite distinct lines of authority. One view is that the failure to pay a deposit prevents any contract coming into existence. As a general proposition this view cannot be supported.182 There is abundant authority for the proposition that, generally, the failure to pay a deposit is simply a breach of contract.183 This is entirely at odds with the view that a failure to pay prevents any binding agreement being reached. On the other hand, where an option relating to land requires a deposit to be paid on the exercise of the option, a failure to pay may amount to noncompliance with the requirements of the option. No binding contract for the sale of land will result if the deposit is not paid.184 The second view is that recovery is precluded by the fact of termination. However, the main authority here, Lowe v Hope,185 is difficult to support because it involves a confusion between rescission and termination. Decisions such as McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd186 indicate that this line of authority cannot be supported.187 The third view is that explained above, namely, that the deposit is recoverable
as a liquidated sum due for payment prior to termination and recoverable afterwards on the basis of an accrued right. Most of the recent decisions apply this view.188 As against these cases it might be argued that a [page 901] deposit payment is a security which comes from possession,189 rather than a right of action, so that if the plaintiff has entered into the contract without obtaining the payment the express or implied right of forfeiture is irrelevant.190 However, the argument based on accrued rights can withstand this line of reasoning. The right to payment is ‘unconditionally acquired’ by the plaintiff because termination does not cause a total failure of consideration.191 Therefore, although the obligation to pay is not entirely independent of the plaintiff’s obligation to perform, it is sufficiently independent to say that the payment remains recoverable after termination.
Restrictions on Recovery Common law [37-38] Total failure of consideration. If termination causes a total failure of consideration, a promisor who has paid money under the contract is entitled to recover it from the promisee.192 This principle is relevant to the present context because of a defendant’s ability to set up total failure of consideration as a defence to an action by the plaintiff to recover money which should have been paid prior to termination. In this way circuity of action is avoided.193 For example, assume that V agrees to sell land to P and that P breaches an essential time stipulation. If V terminates performance of the contract V will be discharged from the obligation to convey title. Therefore, in any action to recover an overdue payment towards the price, V must fail,194 because the consideration for the payment has failed. V ‘cannot have the land and its value’195 as well. However, V is entitled to claim compensation. The principle also applies to contracts which provide for the payment of the price by instalments. Thus, if V terminates performance of a sale of land contract because P failed to pay an instalment and breached an essential time stipulation,
P may rely on total failure of consideration in an action to recover the outstanding payment.196 This is because the law [page 902] regards V’s title to payment as conditional upon the ultimate completion of the contract.197 The principles stated above are not restricted to contracts for the sale of land, and can, for example, be applied to contracts for the sale of goods.198 However, the failure of consideration must be total, not partial. Thus, the principles will not apply to a contract of hire where the hirer has had the use of the goods.199 Nor will they apply to restrict a plaintiff’s right to recover an unpaid deposit since the consideration for the payment (or promise of payment) is almost invariably the plaintiff’s entry into the contract.200 A court’s refusal to allow the recovery of a liquidated sum on the ground of a total failure of consideration, does not prevent the plaintiff claiming damages for the defendant’s breach of contract.201
Relief against penalties and forfeiture [37-39] Deposits. An agreed damages clause is not enforceable if it is a penalty.202 However, the distinction between liquidated damages and penalties is only applicable if the money is payable on breach.203 Accordingly, a sum fixed by the contract will not fall within the distinction if it is simply the price of the plaintiff’s performance. The fact that a deposit payment does not become payable by reason of a breach of contract looks, at first blush, to exclude it from the distinction. A liquidated damages clause quantifies the plaintiff’s damages even if the defendant has committed a serious breach or repudiation and the plaintiff has terminated performance of the contract.204 On the other hand, a plaintiff can claim damages and forfeit a deposit in the event of default by the defendant. Even if the plaintiff has suffered no loss, a nominal sum is recoverable as damages in addition to the deposit. However, since a deposit payment is liable to forfeiture on breach it is analogous to agreed damages. The plaintiff’s right to retain the deposit, in cases where the performance of the contract has been terminated, has been held to be sufficient to make the distinction between liquidated damages and penalties relevant to the sum to be
forfeited on breach.205 But it is not determinative. In NLS Pty Ltd v Hughes206 Barwick CJ explained the relationship between the plaintiff’s rights of forfeiture and damages, and the distinction drawn between liquidated damages and penalties. He said207 that the [page 903] ‘question whether there is an implied limitation upon the amount of the damages recoverable does not arise for discussion’ where the plaintiff is ‘content to forfeit the amount of the money’. Although in such a case it can be assumed that the loss is less than the amount of the payment, treatment of the ‘money [as] a genuine pre-estimate of the damages does involve an implied limitation upon the liability to pay damages’. Nevertheless, in his view208 it is not correct to say that if the amount agreed is not a penalty ‘it must be a pre-estimate of damages’. The reason for this conclusion was that a deposit may be ‘neither a penalty nor a preestimate of damages but an earnest of performance which, on default, may be retained and credited against the damage suffered’. The fact that a deposit which is not a penalty is not necessarily a pre-estimate of damages implies that the distinction between liquidated damages and penalties is applied to deposit payments in a way which differs from its application to agreed damages clauses. In fact, it may be better to treat the jurisdiction of the court as based on an ability to relieve against the unconscionable forfeiture of payments made by a defendant, with the result that the factors referred to earlier209 are not determinative.210 There is, however, authority for the proposition that where a deposit is so extravagant as to be in the nature of a penalty the court may permit the defaulting party to recover part of the deposit if forfeiture would be unconscionable.211 Relief will not be granted where the deposit is 10 per cent of the contract price.212 If the court should decide to grant relief against the forfeiture of the deposit the plaintiff can claim damages in respect of the defendant’s breach.213 [37-40] Part payments. The law with respect to part payments is complicated. If the contract expressly provides for forfeiture this provision will prevent the defendant relying on total failure of consideration as a defence to an action to recover an overdue payment. The defendant must defend the action by seeking relief against forfeiture.
Consider, for example, a contract for the sale of land which provides for the payment of the price by instalments. Assume that the contract contains a clause which, following default in punctual payment by the defendant-purchaser (P), confers on the plaintiff-vendor (V) the right to terminate the performance of the contract, and to forfeit payments made under the contract. Assume further that V exercises the right to terminate on default by P. Relief against forfeiture may be relevant in any of three ways. First, as has already been explained,214 P may apply for relief against the forfeiture of the interest in the land obtained on entry into the contract and (at least in extreme cases) obtain specific performance of the contract. [page 904] Second, the decision in Kilmer v British Columbia Orchard Lands Ltd215 supports the view that specific performance may also be obtained so as to provide relief against the forfeiture of the payments actually made under the contract. Therefore, if V seeks to recover an overdue instalment, and P establishes that the forfeiture clause is in the nature of a penalty designed to secure payment, the readiness and willingness of P to pay may provide P with a case for specific performance of the contract. A third approach is for P to invoke relief against forfeiture as a ground for restitution of the money which has been paid, on the basis that the forfeiture provision is in the nature of a penalty.216 This might, for example, assist a defendant who is not ready and willing to perform. However, there is no case in which this line of defence has been used in an action for a liquidated sum and it is more appropriately discussed in the context of restitution.217 An acceleration clause in a contract, which is not construed as a penalty under the rules discussed earlier,218 might possibly provide a case for relief against forfeiture. In O’Dea v Allstates Leasing System (WA) Pty Ltd,219 in the context of a lease of goods, Brennan J said:220 By conferring on the lessor the right in the event of the lessees’ default to recover both possession of the vehicle hired and the entire price of the hiring before the hiring period expires, cl 12 provides an incentive for the due and punctual performance of the lessee’s obligations — pecuniary and other — by imposing a liability to forfeiture. The lessees may lose both possession and use of the vehicle for the remaining period of 36 months and that proportion of the entire rental which is attributable to the hiring period remaining after repossession. Although a stipulation as to the price payable for the sale or hiring of goods is not itself in the nature of a penalty, a stipulation which provides for the forfeiture on breach by the buyer or hirer of both the price and the consideration for which it is payable is in the
nature of a penalty and equity will relieve against it. The foundation of the jurisdiction to relieve against forfeiture is that the stipulation for the forfeiture is really in the nature of a penalty …
As he went on to point out, the principle could only apply in respect of the money payable for the period after repossession of the vehicle. Assuming that the defendant makes out a defence to the plaintiff’s action to recover a part payment, the plaintiff is entitled to recover damages for breach notwithstanding the relief granted to the defendant.221 [page 905]
Statute [37-41] Examples of statutory restrictions. A defendant may be granted relief in respect of the recovery of a liquidated sum if the provision, or the conduct of the plaintiff, falls within a statutory provision relating to unjust or unconscionable contracts and provisions.222 Other examples of statutory restrictions are more specific. In New South Wales and Victoria there is power to order the return of a deposit paid under a contract for the sale of land.223 There is no reason, in principle, why a purchaser of land should not be permitted to defend an action for payment by proving that, if payment were ordered, he or she would be entitled to the return of the money. That is not to say, however, that the defendant is likely to succeed; the jurisdiction is a fairly narrow one. Under the National Credit Code224 (‘the Code’), a credit contract must not impose a monetary liability on a debtor in respect of a fee or charge which is prohibited by the Code or in respect of a fee, charge or interest charge which exceeds that which may be charged under the Code.225 And where a court reopens a credit transaction, it may relieve a debtor from the payment of any amount in excess of what the court considers to be reasonably payable.226 These provisions may also apply in favour of a defendant who is defending a plaintiff’s claim to recover a liquidated sum. 1.
See J W Carter and M J Tilbury, “Remedial Choice and Contract Drafting” (1998) 13 JCL 5.
2.
See [1-05].
3.
These advantages extend to claims for sums which, although not fixed by the contract, are liquidated at the time of suit.
4.
See [35-06].
5.
Young v Queensland Trustees Ltd (1956) 99 CLR 560.
6.
See [35-05]. Generally, where the defendant raises a defence, such as frustration of the contract, the onus remains with the plaintiff. Cf [33-46] (self-induced frustration).
7.
See [28-15].
8.
Young v Queensland Trustees Ltd (1956) 99 CLR 560 at 568.
9.
(1956) 99 CLR 560 at 567.
10.
Cf Coast Securities No 9 Pty Ltd v Alabac Pty Ltd [1984] 2 Qd R 25. If no sum is fixed but is capable of being liquidated, it may, if subsequently fixed, be recovered in contract or under principles of restitution. See generally Chapter 38.
11.
See further [37-31], [37-40].
12.
The claim is for damages for anticipatory breach; see [36-02]–[36-05].
13.
P v D1 and D2 (The C & J) [1984] 2 Lloyd”s Rep 601; Zea Star Shipping Co SA v Parley Augustsson (Invest) A/S [1984] 2 Lloyd”s Rep 605n. But see [33-26].
14.
Cases in which prevention is said to be “equal” to performance (see, eg Hotham v East India Co (1787) 1 TR 638 at 645; 99 ER 1295 at 1299) must be taken as referring to an ability to claim damages even though the plaintiff has not performed. See, eg Peter Turnbull & Co Pty Ltd v Mundus Trading Co (Australasia) Pty Ltd (1954) 90 CLR 235 (see [30-47]). But note the difference of opinion in City Motors (1933) Pty Ltd v Southern Aerial Super Service Pty Ltd (1961) 106 CLR 477 at 484, 488, 489–90.
15.
See [37-25].
16.
Mondel v Steel (1841) 8 M & W 858; 151 ER 1288.
17.
[1981] QB 290.
18.
See also [11-09].
19.
See [1-05].
20.
See also S M Waddams, “The Choice of Remedy for Breach of Contract”, in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995, p 479 (different consequences on failure to comply with the orders).
21.
See generally on such discretionary factors [39-07]–[39-12].
22.
See ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 52(1); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 51(1); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 50(1); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 48(1); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 53(1); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 55(1); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 48(1).
23.
See Colley v Overseas Exporters [1921] 3 KB 302 at 306–10; Plaimar Ltd v Waters Trading Co Ltd (1945) 72 CLR 304. On damages for non-acceptance see [35-40].
24.
For the corresponding provisions see [28-06].
25.
Martin v Hogan (1917) 24 CLR 234 at 261, 267.
26.
See [28-22]–[28-24].
27.
See [28-25]–[28-26].
28.
See, eg Workman Clark & Co Ltd v Brazileno [1908] 1 KB 968.
29.
See [36-16]. Specific performance may be a more appropriate remedy in some cases; see [39-06].
30.
See E V Lanyon, “Equity and the Doctrine of Penalties” (1996) 9 JCL 234; J W Carter and Elisabeth
Peden, “A Good Faith Perspective on Liquidated Damages” (2007) 23 JCL 157. 31.
See [35-06].
32.
(1927) 40 CLR 98 at 106.
33.
Robophone Facilities Ltd v Blank [1966] 1 WLR 1428 at 1447.
34.
Alternatively, the court may by virtue of statutes such as the Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW), have jurisdiction to grant relief against the clause. See generally [24-21]–[24-31]. Note also [37-40], [3831]–[38-33] (relief against forfeiture).
35.
Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v New Garage and Motor Co Ltd [1915] AC 79 at 86.
36.
Robophone Facilities Ltd v Blank [1966] 1 WLR 1428 at 1446; Interstar Wholesale Finance Pty Ltd v Integral Home Loans Pty Ltd (2008) 257 ALR 292 at 320; [2008] NSWCA 310 at [99]. On the economic efficiency of the rule see E L Talley, “Contract Renegotiation, Mechanism Design, and the Liquidated Damages Rule” (1994) 46 Stanford LR 1195.
37.
[2012] HCA 30. Cf AMEV-UDC Finance Ltd v Austin (1986) 162 CLR 170 at 191; 68 ALR 185.
38.
Public Works Commissioner v Hills [1906] AC 368.
39.
See, eg Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v New Garage and Motor Co Ltd [1915] AC 79 at 86; Western Electric Co (Australia) Ltd v Ward (1933) 51 WN (NSW) 19 at 20.
40.
(1983) 152 CLR 359 at 400; 45 ALR 632. See also Acron Pacific Ltd v Offshore Oil NL (1985) 157 CLR 514; 61 ALR 245.
41.
For the evidence admissible see Multiplex Constructions Pty Ltd v Abgarus Pty Ltd (1992) 33 NSWLR 504 at 508. See further [37-09].
42.
Robophone Facilities Ltd v Blank [1966] 1 WLR 1428 at 1447; Multiplex Constructions Pty Ltd v Abgarus Pty Ltd (1992) 33 NSWLR 504 at 527.
43.
Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co Ltd v New Garage and Motor Co Ltd [1915] AC 79 at 86; Boucaut Bay Co Ltd v The Commonwealth (1927) 40 CLR 98 at 107.
44.
[1905] AC 6.
45.
See, eg Bridge v Campbell Discount Co Ltd [1962] AC 600 (“agreed compensation”).
46.
See J W Carter, “Termination Clauses” (1990) 3 JCL 90.
47.
See, eg Boucaut Bay Co Ltd v The Commonwealth (1927) 40 CLR 98; Bridge v Campbell Discount Co Ltd [1962] AC 600.
48.
See [32-09].
49.
Robophone Facilities Ltd v Blank [1966] 1 WLR 1428 at 1446.
50.
See [37-17].
51.
See [37-40].
52.
See, eg Scandinavian Trading Tanker Co AB v Flota Petrolera Ecuatoriana [1983] 2 AC 694 at 702; W & J Investments Ltd v Bunting [1984] 1 NSWLR 331 at 335–6.
53.
See [35-01].
54.
(1975) 132 CLR 216 at 221; 6 ALR 15.
55.
Cooden Engineering Co Ltd v Stanford [1953] 1 QB 86 at 94.
56.
See further [37-14].
57.
See, eg Citicorp Australia Ltd v Hendry (1985) 4 NSWLR 1 at 39–40.
58.
See the discussion in AMEV-UDC Finance Ltd v Austin (1986) 162 CLR 170 at 192–3, 201–3, 212.
59.
[1989] 1 WLR 1026 at 1039.
60.
See Treitel, Remedies for Breach of Contract, 1988, p 217.
61.
(1986) 162 CLR 170 (see J W Carter (1987) 1 Com LQ 9; R M Goode (1988) 104 LQR 25).
62.
See [37-17].
63.
See [36-15].
64.
W & J Investments Ltd v Bunting [1984] 1 NSWLR 331 at 335 (see A H Hudson (1985) 101 LQR 480).
65.
AMEV-UDC Finance Ltd v Austin (1986) 162 CLR 170 at 192–3, 201–3, 212.
66.
[1915] AC 79 at 87.
67.
[1905] AC 6 at 10.
68.
(2005) 224 CLR 656; 222 ALR 306; [2005] HCA 71 (see Elisabeth Peden and J W Carter (2006) 22 JCL 189).
69.
(1986) 162 CLR 170 at 190.
70.
Cf Photo Production Ltd v Securicor Transport Ltd [1980] AC 827 at 850. See also G D Muir, “Stipulations for the Payment of Agreed Sums” (1985) 10 Syd LR 503.
71.
[1933] AC 20.
72.
[1915] AC 79 at 87.
73.
Cf Jobson v Johnson [1989] 1 WLR 1026; and see further [37-17].
74.
See [36-07].
75.
(1975) 132 CLR 216.
76.
[1915] AC 79 at 87. See also O”Dea v Allstates Leasing System (WA) Pty Ltd (1983) 152 CLR 359 at 399–400.
77.
Quoting Lord Elphinstone v Monkland Iron and Coal Co Ltd (1886) 11 App Cas 332 at 342 per Lord Watson.
78.
See further [37-15].
79.
[1915] AC 79.
80.
[1915] AC 79 at 87–8.
81.
(1919) 27 CLR 119.
82.
(1919) 27 CLR 119 at 128, 133.
83.
Contrast Spiers Earthworks Pty Ltd v Landtec Projects Corp Pty Ltd (No 2) (2012) 287 ALR 360 at 369; [2012] WASCA 53 at [40].
84.
See Clydebank Engineering and Shipbuilding Co Ltd v Don Jose Ramos Yzquierdo y Castaneda [1905] AC 6 at 11.
85.
See M P Furmston, “Contract Planning: Liquidated Damages, Deposits and the Foreseeability Rule” (1991) 4 JCL 1.
86.
[2012] HCA 30 at [10], [46], [50].
87.
[1962] AC 600 (see G H L Fridman (1963) 26 MLR 198).
88.
(1983) 152 CLR 359 (see [37-17]).
89.
But see Associated Distributors Ltd v Hall [1938] 2 KB 83; International Leasing Corp (Vic) Ltd v Aiken [1967] 2 NSWR 427 at 442. And cf United Dominions Trust (Commercial) Ltd v Ennis [1968] 1 QB 54.
90.
See, eg Jobson v Johnson [1989] 1 WLR 1026 (see Charles Harpum [1989] CLJ 370; D R Harris [1990] LMCLQ 158); P C Developments Pty Ltd v Revell (1991) 22 NSWLR 615; Wollondilly Shire Council v Picton Power Lines Pty Ltd (1994) 33 NSWLR 551 at 555; Andrews v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd [2012] HCA 30 at [12]. But cf CRA Ltd v NZ Goldfields Investments [1989] VR 870.
91.
(1983) 152 CLR 359. See R P Meagher, “Penalties in Chattel Leases” in Finn, ed, Essays in Equity, 1985, p 46; D S K Ong, “Chattel Leasing: Indulgences, Liquidated Damages and Penalties” (1986) 60 ALJ 272.
92.
(1983) 152 CLR 359 at 366–8.
93.
(1983) 152 CLR 359 at 367. See also Thompson v Hudson (1869) LR 4 HL 1; Cameron v UBS AG (2000) 2 VR 108. Cf Acron Pacific Ltd v Offshore Oil NL (1985) 157 CLR 514 (moratorium deed). Contrast Fermiscan Pty Ltd v James (2009) 261 ALR 408 at 434; [2009] NSWCA 355 at [143].
94.
(1983) 152 CLR 359 at 367.
95.
See [37-40] and [37-16] respectively.
96.
For suggestions of a need for reform in the law see Citicorp Australia Ltd v Hendry (1985) 4 NSWLR 1 at 22–4, 29–30.
97.
See, eg AMEV-UDC Finance Ltd v Austin (1986) 162 CLR 170. See also Financings Ltd v Baldock [1963] 2 QB 104.
98.
IAC (Leasing) Ltd v Humphrey (1972) 126 CLR 131; Esanda Finance Corp Ltd v Plessnig (1989) 166 CLR 131; 84 ALR 99 (see J W Carter (1989) 2 JCL 78; John Wilkin [1990] LMCLQ 16); AMEV Finance Ltd v Artes Studios Thoroughbreds Pty Ltd (1989) 15 NSWLR 564.
99.
See [36-15].
100. Contrast Capital Finance Co Ltd v Donati (1977) 121 SJ 270. The problem is avoided if the contract makes every breach the breach of an essential term or a repudiation: Lombard North Central Plc v Butterworth [1987] QB 527 (see Hugh Beale (1988) 104 LQR 355). 101. Carter, Carter”s Breach of Contract, 2011, §§11-35ff; L J Priestley, “Conduct after Breach: The Position of the Party Not in Breach” (1991) 3 JCL 218 (and commentary thereon by Keith Mason (1991) 3 JCL 232); J W Carter, Andrew Phang and Sock-Yong Phang, “Performance Following Repudiation: Legal and Economic Interests” (1999) 15 JCL 97; Qiao Liu, “The White & Carter Principle: A Restatement” (2011) 74 MLR 171. 102. See [31-01]. 103. (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 632 at 645 (reversed on other grounds sub nom Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd (1938) 61 CLR 286). 104. For qualifications see [37-21]–[37-24]. 105. See generally [39-01]–[39-12]. 106. See [39-06]. 107. [1962] AC 413 (see K Scott [1962] CLJ 12; M P Furmston (1962) 25 MLR 364; Note (1963) 2 Adel LR 103). 108. Initially their claim was based on an acceleration clause in the contract, but this played no part in the proceedings before the House of Lords. 109. But cf [31-17].
110. White and Carter had, in fact, made no attempt to minimise their loss; see Alan Rodger (1977) 93 LQR 168. 111. See A L Goodhart, “Measure of Damages when a Contract is Repudiated” (1962) 78 LQR 263; S J Stoljar, “Some Problems of Anticipatory Breach” (1974) 9 MULR 355. Contrast P M Nienaber, “The Effect of Anticipatory Repudiation: Principle and Policy” [1962] CLJ 213. 112. [1962] AC 413. 113. See also City Motors (1933) Pty Ltd v Southern Aerial Super Service Pty Ltd (1961) 106 CLR 477 at 489. 114. (1938) 38 SR (NSW) 632 at 645 (reversed on other grounds sub nom Luna Park (NSW) Ltd v Tramways Advertising Pty Ltd (1938) 61 CLR 286). 115. See [28-09], [38-22]. 116. See, eg Martin v Hogan (1917) 24 CLR 234 at 264; Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v Watson (1946) 72 CLR 435 at 451, 452, 461, 465, 476; Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 428; 131 ALR 422; Visscher v Giudice (2009) 239 CLR 361 at 380; 258 ALR 651; [2009] HCA 34 at [54]. 117. (1881) 6 App Cas 251. 118. Colley v Overseas Exporters [1921] 3 KB 302; and see [28-09]. 119. Hounslow London BC v Twickenham Garden Developments Ltd [1971] 1 Ch 233 at 253–4. 120. Contrast the decision in Larking v Great Western (Nepean) Gravel Ltd (1940) 64 CLR 221. 121. [1962] AC 413 at 431. 122. [1962] AC 600 at 431. 123. [1962] AC 600 at 431. 124. [1962] AC 413. 125. [1962] AC 600 at 445. Nevertheless, the suggestion by two members of the English Court of Appeal in Decro-Wall International SA v Practitioners in Marketing Ltd [1971] 1 WLR 361, that Lord Reid was merely formulating an argument of counsel, was rejected in Hounslow London BC v Twickenham Garden Developments Ltd [1971] 1 Ch 233 at 253, 254. 126. See Clea Shipping Corp v Bulk Oil International Ltd (The Alaskan Trader) [1984] 1 All ER 129 at 133, 135. 127. See George Barker (Transport) Ltd v Eynon [1974] 1 WLR 462. 128. See Anglo-African Shipping Co of New York Inc v J Mortner Ltd [1962] 1 Lloyd”s Rep 81 at 91 (affirmed without reference to the point at 610). Cf Ahmed v Estate and Trust Agencies (1927) Ltd [1938] AC 624 at 639–40. 129. [1978] 2 Lloyd”s Rep 357. 130. [1976] 1 Lloyd”s Rep 250. 131. [1984] 1 All ER 129 (see A S Taylor (1984) 128 Sol J 843; J W Carter and Geoffrey Marston [1985] CLJ 21). 132. See [37-16]. 133. Scandinavian Trading Tanker Co AB v Flota Petrolera Ecuatoriana [1983] 2 AC 694. 134. Cf Isabella Shipowner SA v Shagang Shipping Co Ltd (The Aquafaith) [2012] EWHC 1077 (Comm); [2012] 2 Lloyd”s Rep 61 (see J W Carter (2012) 128 LQR 490).
See Stocznia Gdanska SA v Latvian Shipping Co [1996] 2 Lloyd”s Rep 132 at 139 (see J W Carter 135. (1998) 12 JCL 247) (reversed without reference to the point [1998] 1 WLR 574). 136. See Jack Beatson, “Discharge for Breach: The Position of Instalments, Deposits and Other Payments Due Before Completion” (1981) 97 LQR 389. 137. See [32-05]. 138. (1936) 54 CLR 361 at 379–80. 139. See also George Mountreas & Co SA v Navimpex Centrala Navala [1985] 2 Lloyd”s Rep 515; Bank of Boston Connecticut v European Grain and Shipping Ltd [1989] AC 1056. Cf Hurst v Bryk [2002] 1 AC 185 at 199. 140. See [34-09], [34-15], [34-24]. 141. See Carter, Carter”s Breach of Contract, 2011, §§12-01ff; J W Carter and J C Phillips, “The Liability of Debtors and Guarantors Under Contracts Discharged for Breach” (1992) 22 UWALR 338; J W Carter and G J Tolhurst, “Recovery of Contract Debts Following Termination for Breach” (2009) 25 JCL 191. 142. See [37-38]–[37-41]. 143. See also [32-02]. 144. (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 477 (see [32-04]). 145. See, eg Shevill v Builders Licensing Board (1982) 149 CLR 620; 42 ALR 305. 146. [1980] 1 WLR 1129. 147. See also Hyundai Shipbuilding & Heavy Industries Co Ltd v Pournaras [1978] 2 Lloyd”s Rep 501; Nangus Pty Ltd v Charles Donovan Pty Ltd [1989] VR 184. Contrast Sunbird Plaza Pty Ltd v Maloney (1988) 166 CLR 245; 77 ALR 205. 148. Lord Russell and Lord Keith did not consider the issue in detail. 149. See [37-38]. 150. See Rover International Ltd v Cannon Film Sales Ltd [1989] 1 WLR 912 at 931 (appropriate analogy is with a building contract providing for progress payments). 151. See further [37-38]. 152. (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 477 (see [32-04]). 153. [1998] 1 WLR 574 (see J Beatson and G Tolhurst [1998] CLJ 253; J W Carter (1998) 13 JCL 156; Gerard McMeel [1998] LMCLQ 308). 154. Ettridge v Vermin Board of the District of Murat Bay [1928] SASR 124 at 128; Elkhoury v Farrow Mortgage Services Pty Ltd (1993) 114 ALR 541. 155. Mersey Steel and Iron Co Ltd v Naylor Benzon & Co (1884) 9 App Cas 434. 156. Boston Deep Sea Fishing and Ice Co v Ansell (1888) 39 Ch D 339 at 352, 360, 366–7. 157. Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v Watson (1946) 72 CLR 435 at 461; and see [3733]. Cf Bank of Boston Connecticut v European Grain and Shipping Ltd [1989] AC 1056 (shipowner may recover advance freight under a voyage charterparty). 158. Westralian Farmers Ltd v Commonwealth Agricultural Service Engineers Ltd (1936) 54 CLR 361 at 369. For recovery of instalment payments see [37-34]. 159. See [28-06]–[28-07]. 160. See [37-17].
161. [1909] 1 KB 98. 162. [1909] 1 KB 98 at 102. See also Chatterton v Maclean [1951] 1 All ER 761. 163. Leslie Shipping Co v Welstead [1921] 3 KB 420. 164. See China National Foreign Trade Transportation Corp v Evlogia Shipping Co SA of Panama (The Mihalios Xilas) [1979] 1 WLR 1018 at 1025, 1026. Cf Pan Ocean Shipping Co Ltd v Creditcorp Ltd (The Trident Beauty) [1994] 1 WLR 161. 165. Shevill v Builders Licensing Board (1982) 149 CLR 620. 166. See Canas Property Co Ltd v KL Television Services Ltd [1970] 2 QB 433. 167. See Goodman v Pocock (1850) 15 QB 576; 117 ER 577; Lucy v The Commonwealth (1923) 33 CLR 229. 168. See [28-27]–[28-28]. 169. Cf Government of Newfoundland v Newfoundland Railway Co (1888) 13 App Cas 199 (see [28-26]). 170. [1980] 1 WLR 1129 (see [37-29]). 171. [1998] 1 WLR 574 (see [37-29]). 172. See [37-38]. 173. See [37-40]. 174. Reynolds v Fury [1921] VLR 14. For the position where termination subsequently occurs see [38-24]. 175. See [37-40]. 176. (1933) 48 CLR 457 (see [37-38]). 177. Interest payable during a period of occupation by the purchaser may be recovered for the period until termination: Tropical Traders Ltd v Goonan (1964) 111 CLR 41 at 56. 178. See [37-36]–[37-37]. 179. See K E Lindgren and K G Nicholson, “The Problem of Recovery of an Unpaid Deposit” (1985) 59 ALJ 11. 180. Howe v Smith (1884) 27 Ch D 89 at 101. See further [38-33]. 181. Dewar v Mintoft [1912] 2 KB 373 at 387. And where the defendant has given a cheque or some other form of bill of exchange in payment, the plaintiff may be able to sue on the bill if it has not been met. See Pollway Ltd v Abdullah [1974] 1 WLR 493. Cf Hinton v Sparkes (1868) LR 3 CP 161 (IOU). 182. The main authority, Myton Ltd v Schwab-Morris [1974] 1 WLR 331 was overruled on this point in Damon Compania Naviera SA v Hapag-Lloyd International SA (The Blankenstein) [1985] 1 WLR 435. But cf Brien v Dwyer (1978) 141 CLR 378 at 386; 22 ALR 485. 183. See, eg Pollway Ltd v Abdullah [1974] 1 WLR 493 (see Note (1975) 39 Conv (NS) 313 at 315); Brien v Dwyer (1978) 141 CLR 378. 184. See Lewes Nominees Pty Ltd v Strang (1983) 49 ALR 328; see also [28-37]. The nature of an option may be relevant; see generally [3-48]. However, the particular terms of the option may indicate that punctual payment is not a condition precedent to the existence of a binding contract. See Millichamp v Jones [1982] 1 WLR 1422. 185. [1970] 1 Ch 94. See also Lyon v Magnet Nominees Pty Ltd [1978] VR 673; Kathopoulos v Bjelica Investments Pty Ltd (1979) 46 FLR 112; 25 ALR 309. 186. (1933) 48 CLR 457. See also Johnson v Agnew [1980] AC 367. 187. See [32-04], [32-05].
188. See Farrant v Leburn [1970] WAR 179; Bot v Ristevski [1981] VR 120; Millichamp v Jones [1982] 1 WLR 1422 (see David Hayton [1983] CLJ 197); Damon Compania Naviera SA v Hapag-Lloyd International SA (The Blankenstein) [1985] 1 WLR 435 (affirming and approving [1983] 2 Lloyd”s Rep 522 at 531). 189. A M Shea, “Discharge from Performance of Contracts by Failure of Condition” (1979) 42 MLR 623 at 643. 190. This argument would justify a refusal to award the amount of the deposit as damages in a case where the deposit was not due at the time of termination. It is therefore difficult to support the decision of the majority of the English Court of Appeal in Damon Compania Naviera SA v Hapag-Lloyd International SA (The Blankenstein) [1985] 1 WLR 435, holding that the deposit can be recovered as damages because of the right of forfeiture in cases where the deposit has been paid; see J W Carter (1988) 104 LQR 207. 191. See [37-38]. 192. See [38-06]. 193. See McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 481; Rover International Ltd v Cannon Film Sales Ltd [1989] 1 WLR 912. See also [34-09]. 194. Assuming that the price is not payable on a day certain irrespective of conveyance; see [28-06]. 195. Laird v Pim (1841) 7 M & W 474 at 478; 151 ER 852 at 854; McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 470, 477–8. 196. Even if P has been let into possession: see [38-24]. 197. McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457; and see [37-35]. 198. See McEntire v Crossley Bros Ltd [1895] AC 457 at 464. 199. See, eg O”Dea v Allstates Leasing System (WA) Pty Ltd (1983) 152 CLR 359 at 392–3. 200. Farrant v Leburn [1970] WAR 179 at 184; Bot v Ristevski [1981] VR 120 at 123. 201. McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 479. 202. See [37-07]–[37-17]. 203. See [37-16]. 204. Suisse Atlantique Société d”Armement Maritime SA v NV Rotterdamsche Kolen Centrale [1967] 1 AC 361. 205. Boucaut Bay Co Ltd v The Commonwealth (1927) 40 CLR 98. See further [38-33]. 206. (1966) 120 CLR 583. 207. (1966) 120 CLR 583 at 589. 208. (1966) 120 CLR 583 at 589. 209. See [37-12]–[37-15]. 210. See Yardley v Saunders [1982] WAR 231 at 237. 211. See [38-32]. 212. Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Reliance Carpet Co Pty Ltd (2008) 236 CLR 342 at 351; 246 ALR 448 at 455; [2008] HCA 22 at [26]. 213. See Smyth v Jessep [1956] VLR 230. 214. See [31-13]. 215. [1913] AC 319. See also Re Dagenham (Thames) Dock Co (1873) LR 8 Ch App 1022; McDonald v
Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 470; Legione v Hateley (1983) 152 CLR 406 at 426–8; 46 ALR 1; Stern v McArthur (1988) 165 CLR 489; 81 ALR 463. 216. Cf Steedman v Drinkle [1916] 1 AC 275. 217. See [38-32]. 218. See [37-17]. 219. (1983) 152 CLR 359 (see [37-17]). 220. (1983) 152 CLR 359 at 391. Cf IAC (Leasing) Ltd v Humphrey (1972) 126 CLR 131 at 145; Forestry Commission of New South Wales v Stefanetto (1976) 133 CLR 507 at 524; 8 ALR 297; Jobson v Johnson [1989] 1 WLR 1026. 221. Real Estate Securities Ltd v Kew Golf Links Estate Pty Ltd [1935] VLR 114. 222. See generally Chapter 24. 223. See [38-34]. 224. National Consumer Credit Protection Act 2009 (Cth), Sch 1. 225. See National Credit Code, s 23. 226. See National Credit Code, s 77.
[page 906]
Chapter 38
Restitution [38-01] Introduction. The law of restitution is concerned with the situations in which a plaintiff may recover a money sum equal in value to a benefit obtained by the defendant at the expense of the plaintiff. Although having a long history,1 restitution ‘has recently awakened from [a] long slumber’.2 In Australia today the whole subject is still in the process of development. The structure of this chapter relies heavily on the principle of unjust enrichment, yet that principle has only recently achieved respectability in the common law.3 Most of the instances of restitution discussed below have traditionally been described as quasi-contractual, and based on an implied contract between the parties to the action.4 Thus, where it is held that a defendant is liable to make restitution to the plaintiff, the old approach was to treat the liability as based on a notional or fictional promise analogous to a contractual promise.5 The promise is fictional where — as in all cases of genuine restitutionary liability — there is no contractual promise. The courts recognised this, but continued, for historical reasons, to treat the promise as an essential element of recovery.6 In truth, the concept is a legacy of the time when the plaintiff had to plead one of the forms of action, such as indebitatus assumpsit or debt.7 Or, to put the same point in a less technical way, the assumption that all liability is either contractual or tortious requires the basis for recovery to be in the nature of contract. Nevertheless, as Lord Atkin explained in United Australia Ltd v Barclays Bank Ltd,8 these ‘fantastic resemblances of contracts invented in order to meet requirements of the law as to forms of action which have now disappeared should not in these days be allowed to affect actual rights’. Accordingly, in the context of an action to recover money after a total failure of consideration, Lord Wright said in Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd,9 that the ‘gist of the action is a debt or obligation implied, or, more accurately, imposed, by law in much the same way as the law enforces as a debt the obligation to pay a statutory or
[page 907] customary impost’. Griffith CJ had expressed the same idea in R v Brown,10 when he said that an action lies ‘whenever the defendant had received money which in justice and equity belonged to the plaintiff ’. This invokes the famous statement of Lord Mansfield in Moses v Macferlan11 that liability in restitution is ultimately based on ‘the ties of natural justice and equity’. Although Lord Mansfield’s statement sounds vague and imprecise, it is the origin of the modern law. It is neither necessary nor appropriate to give an exhaustive account of the principles of restitution in this chapter. It is unnecessary because many examples of situations in which restitution may be sought have already been referred to.12 It is inappropriate because restitutionary claims often have no connection with contract. For example, the claim may be based simply on the receipt of money paid under a mistake,13 where there is no suggestion that the money was paid pursuant to a contract or in the belief that a contract existed.14 The objects of this chapter are threefold: to provide a statement of the theory which underlies restitution, including those claims already discussed; since that theory is of general application, to provide an introduction to restitutionary claims in general; and to investigate controversial aspects of the application of the law of restitution in the contract context.
Claims for Restitution General [38-02] Nature of the remedy. A defendant is subject to a liability in restitution whenever the circumstances indicate that the receipt or retention of a benefit obtained by the defendant from the plaintiff is unjust. There are therefore three elements of unjust enrichment:15 ‘benefit’;
‘at the plaintiff’s expense’; and ‘injustice’. Satisfaction of all these elements is essential for a ‘prima facie claim’ in restitution. Assuming that they are satisfied, attention may turn to a fourth [page 908] element, namely, no ‘defence’ is applicable or available. However, for the purposes of this work16 restitutionary defences can be largely ignored.17 The concern is with pecuniary restitution. Because it is an order for the payment of money, the remedy resembles an action for damages. However, that remedy assumes the breach of a primary obligation, and provides an additional or substitutionary form of relief in the form of enforcement of a secondary obligation.18 As a remedy, restitution is different. The obligation to make restitution is a species of primary obligation. The award is not given in substitution for an obligation assumed by the defendant, for example, under a contract. Nor is the award given in substitution for an obligation imposed by law, for example, under tort law. This means that, generally,19 a claim for restitution is independent of wrongdoing, and does not assume that the defendant breached a contract or committed a tort. Instead, it assumes that the defendant has been unjustly enriched at the expense of the plaintiff. Claims for pecuniary restitution are ‘personal claims’, that is, they are available against a particular person, and do not attach to a person’s property. Accordingly, although we often refer, for example, to a claim to recover money which was paid to the defendant, the claim is really for a sum of money equal to that received. The principal significance of this is that the plaintiff is entitled to restitution even though the defendant has disposed of the benefit received. Equally, however, since the plaintiff cannot claim an interest in property, usually the claim will rank with those of other unsecured creditors in bankruptcy proceedings.20 [38-03] Relevance of contract and contract law.21 An action for restitution is not contractual. It differs from an action for damages because it is not based on a wrong. Moreover, whereas claims for contract damages rely on the fact that the plaintiff has suffered loss or damage, those for restitution rely on the fact that the defendant has been unjustly benefited. A claim in restitution differs from an
action for a contract debt because the sum is fixed by reference to a benefit received, not the prior agreement of the parties to the claim. It follows that contract rules, such as privity of contract, do not govern claims for restitution. Nevertheless, the fact that a third party is benefited by performance under a contract does not in itself imply that the third party must make restitution of the benefit.22 The [page 909] importance of that point was emphasised when restitution was refused by the High Court in Lumbers v W Cook Builders Pty Ltd (in liq).23 That is not to say that contract law, or the contract itself, is irrelevant to restitution. There are six points to be made. First, since a loss to the plaintiff is sometimes a benefit to the defendant, some claims may be based in either contract or restitution.24 Second, although it is perfectly acceptable to have alternative bases for a defendant’s liability, it would be intolerable to countenance two conflicting regimes of liability. Most of the relevant claims in restitution arise because a contract is ineffective. Indeed, while an enforceable contract exists between the parties no action can be brought for restitution for a benefit conferred in discharge of an obligation to confer it.25 Thus no action for restitution is available in relation to a benefit conferred in discharge of an obligation under an effective contract while the contract remains ‘on foot’.26 Third, although most claims in restitution which arise in the contract context do so because the contract is ineffective, the mere fact that a contract is ineffective is not sufficient to give rise to a claim for restitution. There must also be an unjust enrichment. Fourth, restitution is not the only source of relief outside contract law. For example, principles of estoppel may operate.27 Fifth, just as it is open to parties to exclude claims in contract, so also is it open to them to exclude restitutionary relief. The most common example of this is a forfeiture clause.28 Sixth, where it is necessary to value a restitutionary claim made in connection with a contract, the terms of the contract are relevant. Ignoring the contract might result in an allocation of risk different from that agreed by the parties.29
[38-04] Recovery based on statute. In considering restitution under statute it is important to distinguish cases in which a statutory right to restitution is recognised or conferred from cases in which a court is given a discretion in relation to a contract or claim in terms which include a power to award restitution. For example, we saw earlier30 that the frustrated contracts legislation operates to confer rights of restitution where a contract [page 910] is discharged by frustration. One significant feature of legislative intervention is that it may, as in that legislation, go further than merely recognising common law rights. Another feature is that the statutory claim may go beyond what can be justified under the broadest concept of unjust enrichment. For example, the Frustrated Contracts Act 1978 (NSW)31 goes beyond the reversal of unjust enrichment by apportioning losses and gains following frustration. A discretionary power to award restitution need not rely on unjust enrichment. Thus, where a contract is reopened by the court in reliance on a statutory power to review a harsh, unfair or unconscionable contract or provision,32 although it may be necessary for the court to address restitutionary issues,33 the statute may do no more than confer a discretion. This is also the case under certain provisions of the Australian Consumer Law.34
Quasi-contract35 [38-05] Common counts. The ‘common counts’ were pleading devices employed to assist in the recovery of debts.36 For example, a debt might arise from the defendant’s receipt of money paid by a plaintiff as a result of a mistake, or from a sale of goods or the execution of work at the defendant’s request. In the third edition of Bullen and Leake37 it was emphasised that the pleading was in general terms, specific details of the debt being left to the evidence. An action in assumpsit would lie, quasi ex contractu, on an implied obligation or debt without there being any genuine agreement to pay the debt. Although the common counts are the historical antecedents of many modern restitutionary claims, because they were used to recover debts they were not restricted to restitutionary claims. For example, the count for work done applied
equally to a restitutionary claim — where there was no effective contract — and to a claim in contract for a reasonable sum due under an express contract to pay a reasonable sum.38 It is sufficient for present purposes to deal with two areas: (1) claims for the recovery of money on the basis of a total failure of consideration; and (2) claims for the reasonable value of work done, as on a quantum meruit. [page 911] [38-06] Total failure of consideration. One group of common counts applied to money had and received by the defendant to the use of the plaintiff.39 Most important was the count to recover money on a total failure of consideration. Where money is paid pursuant to an obligation created by a contract, in the expectation of receiving contractual performance from the defendant, the failure of the defendant to perform the contract is a failure of consideration since it deprives the plaintiff of the performance for which he or she bargained. The terminology is a little confusing. The word ‘consideration’ here refers to performance of the contract rather than the criterion for enforceability of promises which was discussed earlier.40 The fact that the consideration has ‘failed’ does not mean that the contract becomes void. Rather, it refers to a total failure by the defendant to render the agreed return for the plaintiff’s payment. The common law applied if two requirements were met. These continue to govern modern restitutionary claims, in which the failure of consideration signifies an unjust enrichment of the defendant. First, the failure must be total. The issue is whether the plaintiff received any of the performance which was stipulated by the contract as the agreed return for the payment which the plaintiff seeks to recover.41 For example, in Rowland v Divall42 the plaintiff recovered the price of a motor car, which had been paid to the defendant, when the defendant was found to have no title to the vehicle. Since he had not bargained for the use of the vehicle, it was immaterial that the plaintiff had the use of the car for a time. The consideration for the payment was the transfer of ownership in the vehicle and the right to possession, but the plaintiff received neither. Since the consideration for the payment therefore failed the plaintiff was entitled to restitution.
At one time the view was taken that a transfer of title by a seller of goods prevented the recovery of money paid by the buyer on the basis of a total failure of consideration.43 However, the rationale was that for a total failure of consideration to occur the contract had to be rescinded ab initio, and restitutio in integrum achieved by the buyer’s termination. Now that it is established that termination for breach is a sufficient basis for restitution,44 the buyer’s election revests title in the seller.45 When applied to a severable contract, under which payments are made for distinct portions of contract performance,46 the requirement of a total failure of consideration applies to each severable part. Under the law of [page 912] quasi-contract, a court cannot apportion a payment if the parties have not done so. Thus, in Whincup v Hughes47 the plaintiff apprenticed his son to Hughes and paid a premium of £25. Hughes agreed to instruct the apprentice and to pay him wages. After giving one year’s instruction Hughes died and the plaintiff sued to recover the money paid. The court held that as the contract had been partly performed the plaintiff could not recover. At best there had been a partial failure and this did not justify the recovery of the whole sum. Moreover, because there had been no apportionment of the money paid to the years of instruction contemplated, the plaintiff was unable to recover part of the money paid. However, the approach has been questioned in recent cases applying unjust enrichment. Thus, in David Securities Pty Ltd v Commonwealth Bank of Australia48 Mason CJ, Deane, Toohey, Gaudron and McHugh JJ said that in ‘cases where consideration can be apportioned or where counter-restitution is relatively simple, insistence on total failure of consideration can be misleading or confusing’. Arguably, this was taken a step further in Roxborough v Rothmans of Pall Mall Australia Ltd.49 Rothmans had passed on the cost of certain tobacco licences to retailers when selling the products to them. Subsequently, the legislation under which the licences were required was held to be invalid. The retailers then sought restitution for the payments made in respect of the licences. They were successful. The licence fee was held to be a separate and severable component of the overall purchase price. On that basis, there was a total failure of consideration in respect of that severable component. Alternatively, once the legislation was declared invalid, the basis for the ‘licence’ payments failed and they were recoverable on that ground.
The second requirement is the absence of a provision (express or implied) in the contract stating that the money in question is to be retained by the defendant. For example, the contract may contain a provision for the forfeiture of money paid to the defendant in the event of breach on the plaintiff’s part.50 It is not a requirement of the claim that the defendant breached the contract. Thus, the claim is available where the contract is ineffective for reasons other than breach, such as frustration. It therefore also follows that, so long as the two requirements are met, a party who breached the contract is entitled to recover money paid under the contract if it is subsequently terminated.51 [38-07] Quantum meruit. Another common count was to recover a reasonable sum (quantum meruit) for work done and materials supplied to the defendant by the plaintiff at the defendant’s request.52 This form of [page 913] claim arose in response to the shortcomings of the action in debt, namely, the necessity of a liquidated sum,53 and the inability to maintain assumpsit where there was no express promise to pay. The modern perspective was stated in Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul.54 It will be recalled55 that a builder sued to recover the value of the work done under an oral building contract where the customer agreed to pay a reasonable sum. The claim could not be framed in contract due to non-compliance with s 45 of the Builders Licensing Act 1971 (NSW), which required the contract to be in writing. Deane J said56 that quantum meruit had been developed in the law of quasi-contract to accommodate two distinct categories of claim. First, it was employed to recover a debt arising under a genuine contract, whether express or implied. The action was on the contract, and this was so whether it took the form of a ‘special’ or a ‘common’ count. The claim was not for restitution. Today, it should be seen as a claim for a contract debt based on an implied term of the contract. Second, Deane J referred to a claim to recover a debt owing in circumstances where the law imposed (or imputed) an obligation or promise to make payment for a benefit accepted. This action was not based on a genuine agreement at all. Although lawyers continued to speak in terms of an implied contract, a valid and enforceable agreement would in fact preclude such a claim. So, the claim is
today available only where there is no genuine agreement, or where the agreement is frustrated, avoided or unenforceable. Indeed, as Deane J pointed out,57 it is the absence of a genuine agreement, or the fact that it is not applicable, frustrated, avoided or unenforceable ‘that provides the occasion for (and part of the circumstances giving rise to) the imposition by law of the obligation to make restitution’. Treating the claim in Pavey as analogous to one made in the context of the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp),58 it belonged in the second category. It was a claim in restitution not contract. A majority of the High Court held that the builder could succeed despite the inability to sue on the contract. For Deane J there was no need to resort to a fictional promise to explain why the statute did not preclude the action to recover a quantum meruit. The obligation to pay, as Jordan CJ had explained in Horton v Jones (No 2),59 is ‘imposed by law, and does not depend on an inference of an implied promise’. Since the indebitatus form of action is no longer pleaded, and notwithstanding the continued use of the expression ‘quantum meruit’,60 it [page 914] is better to see the restitutionary claim as one for ‘reasonable remuneration’. It applies in a variety of situations, analysed below from the perspective of unjust enrichment.61
Unjust Enrichment62 [38-08] Recognition. In Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul63 the rationale for the imposition of a liability was expressed in terms of unjust enrichment, rather than the consensual assumption of responsibility.64 Deane J described65 unjust enrichment as a ‘unifying legal concept’ which: explains why the law recognises, in a variety of distinct categories of case, an obligation on the part of the defendant to make fair and just restitution for a benefit derived at the expense of a plaintiff and which assists in the determination, by the ordinary processes of legal reasoning, of the question whether the law should, in justice, recognise such an obligation in a new or developing category of case.
It was a bold step for the High Court to adopt unjust enrichment as the basis for restitution, and the implications have not yet been fully worked out.66 In later
cases, the High Court has stressed that unjust enrichment is not an independent principle of law. Indeed, for the most part, even at the level of concept the High Court has shown much less enthusiasm than in Pavey. However, its decision in Equuscorp Pty Ltd (formerly Equus Financial Services Ltd) v Haxton67 indicates that the High Court recognises the importance of the concept. At the practical level, there is no need for a plaintiff to recite the terminology of the forms of action.68 Two things must, however, be appreciated. First, the fact that unjust enrichment provides the proper theory does not imply that the court can order restitution simply because that appears to be a ‘fair’ result. There must be a recognised basis for the claim.69 [page 915] Second, the displacement of implied contract by unjust enrichment does not mean that all the old cases were wrongly decided. The impact is that we now have a different explanation, with the potential for reconsideration of established principles and application of the law to new areas. [38-09] Elements. It is worth restating70 (in more detail) the elements which make up the concept of unjust enrichment: (1) an element of benefit received, retained, realised or realisable by the defendant; (2) an element which provides the plaintiff with ‘title’ to make the claim, namely, that the benefit was at the plaintiff’s expense and not at the expense of some other person; and (3) an element of injustice, that is, some recognised circumstance showing that it was unjust, unfair, unconscionable or inequitable for the defendant to obtain (or retain) the benefit. Because unjust enrichment is a unifying concept rather than an independent principle, these elements cannot be dealt with on an abstract basis. In Lumbers v W Cook Builders Pty Ltd (in liq),71 the High Court said: The application of a framework for analysis expressed only at the level of abstraction adopted in this case, by reference to ‘benefit’, ‘expense’ and ‘acceptance’ coupled with considerations of unconscionability, creates a serious risk of producing a result that is discordant with accepted principle, thus creating a lack of coherence with other branches of the law … .
Because unjust enrichment replaces the old rationalisation, the analysis below
is to some extent an evaluation of old cases from a new perspective.
Benefit Types of Benefits [38-10] Money and other benefits. It might be thought that the concept of benefit is a simple one. In fact, it attracts complex ideas, and virtually the only straightforward proposition is that money is always a benefit for the purpose of unjust enrichment. Where a defendant receives money, the benefit to the defendant is obvious or ‘incontrovertible’. Restitution — in the repayment of the money — does not involve the return of the benefit in specie. The plaintiff simply receives an equivalent sum. Similarly, where restitution is sought in respect of other forms of benefit, such as services, the order will be for a money sum.72 Unlike the receipt of money, the receipt of services is not necessarily a benefit. Services are not usually realisable as money, even where there is, in an objective sense, an [page 916] increase in the defendant’s wealth. Another reason the law is complex is that the layperson’s idea that any contractual performance, or increase in the assets of the defendant, is a benefit does not correspond to the restitutionary concept of enrichment. In other words, a simple objective concept does not match the restitutionary concept which incorporates an important subjective element in most cases. [38-11] Services. For the purposes of the law of restitution, a person who receives services is frequently entitled to say that there is no benefit.73 There are two perspectives on this issue. First, to what extent must the benefit alleged to be received match a benefit requested? The inquiry here is whether request is essential, and whether the plaintiff has fully or partially performed the task requested. The focus of discussion of the cases has, principally, been directed to the extent to which the benefit alleged to be received matches the benefit requested. Any request may be implied: it need not be express.74 Pavey &
Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul75 illustrates the strength of a claim of a plaintiff who has fully performed the task requested in a way which corresponds to the performance requested. But once the alleged benefit is not that which the defendant requested the stocks of the plaintiff drop dramatically.76 In order to explain the authorities which illustrate successful claims in respect of partial satisfaction of a request the concept of benefit must be refined. This helps to provide a theoretical framework for unjust enrichment. Second, do all services count as benefits under the unjust enrichment concept? The plaintiff may have performed services which involved the combination of labour and materials. If so there will usually be an end product. Alternatively, the plaintiff may have performed services which involved no more than the supply of information or the application of skill, learning, expertise or talent. A typical example of such services is the work of a professional person such as a solicitor. These issues are addressed below.77 [38-12] Unrequested benefits. Assume that A builds a house on B’s land. Is B obliged to pay for the house even though B did not request it? The answer is no, and the simplest explanation is that for the purposes of restitution there is no enrichment. Even if we also assume that B’s land has increased in value there is still no benefit for which B can be required to make restitution. More elaborate explanations could be given to explain why B may keep what is, objectively, a benefit without paying for it. Thus, it could be pointed out that most restitutionary claims in respect of non-monetary [page 917] benefits rely on the existence of a request that the benefit be conferred, or we could analyse the concept of risk in relation to benefits and say that in doing the work A took the risk that B would refuse to pay for it. Again, it could be pointed out that there is no benefit because B did not have the opportunity to say ‘I do not want a house on my land’. It makes no difference to say that B now owns, and perhaps lives in, a valuable house, that is merely the consequence of B being the owner of the land. In the final analysis the approach of the unjust enrichment concept, in denying benefit, is simply a reflection of the policy of the law against rewarding unrequested benefits. The policy is strongest where the benefit was conferred
officiously,78 but it also applies, generally, to unrequested benefits. This helps to explain aspects of the law which, at first sight, seem to be inexplicable. Thus, even where a request is made, but the work does not correspond to the request, it may be appropriate to say that the person who did the work is in the same position as if no request was made.79 [38-13] Incontrovertible benefit. Where a court orders restitution in respect of a non-monetary benefit, the award is for a sum of money.80 Another explanation of why B, in the example above,81 need not pay for the house is that B should not be compelled to pay a substantial sum of money, and be treated as if the benefit which A conferred has been realised, when the benefit has not been converted into cash. Indeed, an order in A’s favour might force B to sell the land in order to meet the judgment. Nevertheless, a concept of incontrovertible benefit has been suggested as a way around the narrow — subjective — concept found in the cases.82 The anticipation of a necessary expenditure, or a benefit realised in money will constitute an ‘incontrovertible benefit’ which must be paid for. The test to be satisfied is that no reasonable person would deny that a benefit was received,83 whether or not it was requested. However, except where the principle of restitutio in integrum operates,84 there are relatively few illustrations in the cases.85 Craven-Ellis v Canons Ltd86 may be an example. The articles of association of the defendants required their directors to acquire qualification shares in the company within two months of their appointment. The plaintiff was appointed managing director, but the directors who made the appointment had not obtained their qualification shares in accordance with the articles with the result that the agreement was void. Greer LJ said87 that the defendants had been saved a necessary expenditure. If the plaintiff had not performed the services, the defendants ‘would have had to get some other agent’ to carry them out. [page 918] [38-14] Acceptance of benefit.88 A feature which distinguishes services from money is the absence, in many cases, of a free choice to keep or reject the benefit once conferred. The inability to restore the benefit in cases where services are rendered arises from the fact that there is no question of supply of equivalent services by the defendant. If we add to this the plain fact that in many cases services are consumed, or performed on a defendant’s property, so that the
defendant immediately enjoys or becomes the owner of the benefit, there is a very real problem in saying that services have been accepted by the defendant. The absence of an intention on the part of a plaintiff who has rendered unrequested services to make a giftof those services is not enough to found a restitutionary claim. The same is true where a contractual request was only partially satisfied. The benefit must have been accepted.89 The Australian cases therefore treat ‘acceptance of benefit’ as a key factor in establishing a claim for restitution in relation to non-monetary benefits.90 The important feature of acceptance is that it may satisfy both the ‘benefit’ and ‘injustice’ elements of unjust enrichment.91 There are two main categories of acceptance: free acceptance and constructive acceptance. ‘Free acceptance’ shows a defendant’s choice to accept a benefit which could have been rejected.92 It introduces two notions: opportunity (to reject); and knowledge (sufficient to make a choice). ‘Constructive acceptance’ was the concept applied in Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul.93 It operates where, although the contract was ineffective, the defendant received the benefit which was requested. It applies, principally, where an unenforceable contract is fully performed or a distinct (‘severable’) part of a discharged unenforceable contract is performed. Although not defined as such in the cases, a third form of acceptance may exist. It might be termed ‘deemed acceptance’ because it operates where the defendant is precluded from denying that a benefit was received. This applies, mainly, to a claim against a defendant in breach of contract. [38-15] Reliance and restitution. A payment of money or the rendering of services following a request involves reliance by the plaintiff on the words or conduct of the defendant. Does the law of restitution provide a way of responding to a benefit received by the defendant? Or is it a way of responding to the benefit to the defendant of the plaintiff’s reliance? If the [page 919] former is correct, the only possible cases for restitution are where there is an accretion to the wealth of the defendant. This is obviously satisfied by a payment of money, but what is the position where the request was to do work?
Where a builder is asked to perform work, in a situation where it is clear that the work is to be remunerated, the work (if accepted) is an asset in the hands of the customer which must be paid for even though the contract is unenforceable, or indeed never existed.94 However, it has been argued that ‘pure services’,95 that is, work which does not result in an increase in the tangible assets of the defendant do not come within the concept of unjust enrichment. If restitution may be based on the benefit of reliance, restitution is available in cases where there is no increase in the assets of the defendant, but merely a benefit in the satisfaction of the request. However, this would be unsatisfactory. Either the performance of such services constitutes a benefit for the purposes of unjust enrichment or there is no possibility of restitution at all. Restitution is a response to benefit, not to reliance per se. Accordingly, in the recent cases it has become clear that restitution may be available even though all that the plaintiff has done is to provide services which produce no tangible end product.96
Inherently Ineffective Contracts97 [38-16] General. The description ‘inherently ineffective contracts’ is not a precise one. It encompasses a range of defects, such as failure to agree, uncertainty, failure to comply with a statutory requirement of writing, lack of capacity, mistake, illegality, and so on. Inherently ineffective contracts are therefore contracts which fail to materialise, are ‘void’ or ‘unenforceable’. We are therefore dealing with cases in which no contract exists,98 or where the contract which came into existence is not enforceable.99 Cases where the contract, although initially valid, has been discharged or rescinded illustrate contracts which subsequently become ineffective. [38-17] Contracts which fail to materialise. Sabemo Pty Ltd v North Sydney Municipal Council100 concerned a claim by Sabemo in respect of [page 920] services rendered to the council in the following circumstances. In 1969 the council advertised that it planned to build a civic centre, and to award a building lease for development of the land in question. Tenders were called for, for the purpose of bringing the council into a negotiating relationship with the
successful tenderer. Sabemo was the successful tenderer and it prepared various schemes, at least one of which was satisfactory to all interested parties. However, no contract was entered into even though development approval was received. The decision not to proceed had nothing to do with the conduct of Sabemo or the quality of its work. The position was simply that the council decided to reject the idea of a commercial project in favour of a more modest development. Although he was unable to characterise the claim as based on unjust enrichment, Sheppard J held that Sabemo could not be deprived of payment for its labours. He said101 that Sabemo was entitled to ‘compensation or restitution’. The justifiable complaint of Sabemo was that it had relied on the council’s conduct, and provided services from which the council benefited, in determining the building scheme which would meet its needs. However, since the work was not used by the council it is impossible to say that the benefit was realised. Moreover, given that the commercial development was finally dropped, the benefit was not realisable. Sabemo is a case involving ‘pure’ services. It does not seem arguable, on the findings in Sabemo, that Sheppard J’s decision was wrong. Equally, however, the basis of the decision is far from clear. The council got what it asked for, and the argument that it therefore obtained a benefit is quite sensible. Accordingly, the best explanation is that the concept of benefit does extend to pure services, that the council accepted the benefit of the services which Sabemo rendered, and that it would have been unjustly enriched if it did not have to pay for the work.102 The fact that Sheppard J rejected unjust enrichment is easily explained since the concept had not been authoritatively recognised in Australia at the time of the decision. Alternatively, Sheppard J may have been correct in saying that there was an obligation on the council to pay compensation. There was no breach of contract by the council, but Sheppard J may have had in mind the breach of a duty of good faith in negotiating.103 Another argument, again not available at the time of Sheppard J’s decision, relies on the principle of promissory estoppel as discussed in Waltons Stores (Interstate) Ltd v Maher.104 As was explained earlier,105 satisfaction of the requirements of that concept may result in a damages claim being available. Assuming there was an implied promise to enter into the building lease once the project received the necessary approval, Sabemo had done its work in reliance on [page 921]
that promise. An equity may then have arisen for the enforcement of the promise when the necessary approvals were given. The conduct of the council in seeking to withdraw its promise was unconscionable conduct and a remedy was available to Sabemo, to obtain damages equal to the market rate for the work done.106 A less controversial case is British Steel Corp v Cleveland Bridge and Engineering Co Ltd.107 Work was done under a letter of intent which Robert Goff J held had no contractual effect. The anticipated contract never materialised or was void for incompleteness. However, the work which the parties contemplated as being done under contract was substantially completed. This involved the manufacture and delivery of steel nodes by BSC to CBE. The work was not done gratuitously, and Robert Goff J held that a quantum meruit was available. Given that CBE actually received the nodes — they were accepted by CBE — restitution could be based on unjust enrichment. But he emphasised execution of the request that the work be done and the understanding of BSC that it be paid for. One difficulty108 with allowing restitution in cases such as British Steel is that it looks to make the defendant liable without an opportunity to claim in respect of defects in the work done or late performance. In fact, CBE made a claim against BSC for breach of contract. This claim could not succeed because there was no contract. BSC argued that there was no contract for the very purpose of shutting out the claim for compensation. But there are two general answers to this criticism. First, if work is defective a plaintiff may fail in the claim, for example, because acceptance assumes that the work will correspond to the request. Second, and more importantly, the valuation process109 may take account of at least some of the circumstances which cause a defendant to complain, and would, if there was a contract, constitute a breach giving rise to a claim for damages. This is because valuation relates to the work done rather than the work requested. Where the benefit which is at issue takes the form of preparatory work it will be more difficult to establish an entitlement to restitution.110 There may be no intention that the work is to be paid for, or there may be no benefit.111 Indeed, where contract is the only rational basis for the liability [page 922] of the defendant, a court should not allow a claim for restitution, the plaintiff
having taken the risk that no contract would materialise.112 [38-18] Void contracts.113 Where a contract is void, for example, on the ground of uncertainty, but one of the parties made payments for performance under the contract, the money so paid is recoverable if there is a total failure of consideration. Thus, if a contract for the sale of land is held to be void because both parties believed that the vendor owned the land when in fact it was owned by the purchaser, the money paid by the purchaser can be recovered on the ground of total failure of consideration.114 Alternatively, according to the recent English cases,115 restitution can be based on proof of mistake. The right of a plaintiff to recover the reasonable value of services rendered depends on proof of acceptance (of benefit) by the defendant. For example, in Stinchcombe v Thomas116 the plaintiff sued the defendant, as executor and trustee of the deceased for whom the plaintiff had served as housekeeper until his death. There was a request that these services be performed, and the deceased had in fact promised to ‘well reward’ the plaintiff and to leave her a reasonable sum in his will. The deceased left her property to the value of £1000, but the plaintiff alleged that this sum was not sufficient. The court held the alleged contract was void for uncertainty, but allowed recovery of restitution in respect of the benefits conferred by the plaintiff at the deceased’s request. Acceptance of benefit is an alternative explanation for Craven-Ellis v Canons Ltd.117 The court held the contract to be void but found the defendants liable. Their liability was based on ‘an implied promise to pay on a quantum meruit basis’ which arose, as Greer LJ went on to say,118 ‘from the performance of the services and the implied acceptance of the same by the company’. More recently, in Brenner v First Artists’ Management Pty Ltd119 Byrne J held that performance of a management agreement and a record agreement entered into as part of a project for the ‘comeback’ of a famous singer of the 1970s, namely, one Daryl Braithwaite, gave rise to a claim for reasonable remuneration where the agreements were too uncertain to count as contracts. Where a contract is void (but not illegal) by virtue of statute, although no claim can be made in contract, a claim in restitution may be available, [page 923] because it is based on unjust enrichment and therefore independent of contract. However, it is essential for the plaintiff to show that there is a basis for
restitution, such as total failure of consideration or mistake, and also necessary to take into account the policy behind the statute. In some cases the legislation will be found to apply to restitution as well as contract. However, the claim may not in fact be restitutionary. Thus, where a contract for the sale of goods is void for incompleteness due to the parties’ failure to agree on a price,120 the ‘buyer’ will, under the sale of goods legislation,121 be liable to pay a reasonable price for goods actually supplied and accepted. This liability is statutory or contractual rather than restitutionary.122 [38-19] Unenforceable contracts. Most of the unenforceable contract cases concern claims in respect of contracts affected by the Statute of Frauds 1677 (Imp) or derivative legislation. These were dealt with earlier.123
Contracts Discharged after Partial Performance124 Introduction [38-20] General. If a contract has been partially performed, the first question to be asked is whether the plaintiff has performed a part of the contract to be separately paid for by the defendant. For example, if a seller under an instalment goods contract has made deliveries which have been accepted by the buyer, restitution is not relevant. An action for the agreed price is available even if the contract has been validly terminated by the buyer for breach by the seller.125 On the other hand, if the plaintiff has performed part of an ‘entire’126 contract, no action can be brought on the contract and the issue of restitution is raised. In evaluating such a claim, it is necessary to consider: the nature of the benefit; whether the performance of the contract was not completed because of a breach by the plaintiff or defendant; and whether the defendant is unjustly enriched. [page 924]
The discussion below assumes that discharge of the contract is based on termination for breach or repudiation.127
Recovery by the terminating party [38-21] Recovery of money. Assume that a payment is made under a contract, and the agreed return is a non-monetary benefit. A total failure of consideration128 will occur if the contract is discharged before any part of the agreed return has been received. There is then an unjust enrichment of the defendant. As the law currently stands,129 unless the contract was severable and the payment was made for the receipt of a severable part of the defendant’s performance obligations,130 there is no unjust enrichment if the failure is less than total. A recent example is Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov).131 The passenger was not entitled to restitution, although she had paid the whole fare for a cruise in advance, because she enjoyed eight of the promised 14 days when the vessel sank. However, she was not without remedy since she was able to claim compensation for the loss which she suffered.132 [38-22] Recovery as on a quantum meruit. If the defendant’s breach prevented performance by the plaintiff, the plaintiff will be entitled to recover as on a quantum meruit following termination of the performance of the contract. For example, in Stevenson v Hook,133 a surveyor recovered the value of work done when the contract was discharged for repudiation on the part of the defendant after the work which the plaintiff had been requested to do was partially completed. More recently, in Renard Constructions (ME) Pty Ltd v Minister for Public Works134 a builder’s claim for reasonable remuneration succeeded following discharge of a schedule of rates building contract on the principal’s repudiation. The principal had wrongfully terminated the contract after the builder had carried out part of the work. The importance of asking whether the defendant was in breach is also illustrated by a lump sum employment contract which has been partially performed by the employee. An employee who is wrongfully dismissed is entitled to terminate the performance of the contract. Having done so the employee has the choice between claiming damages and claiming [page 925]
restitution in respect of the benefits conferred on the employer in partially performing the contract.135 [38-23] Unjust enrichment without benefit. In Planché v Colburn136 the plaintiff agreed to write a volume on costume and ancient armour for publication by the defendants in The Juvenile Library. After the plaintiff had spent money viewing a collection of ancient armour, and completed (but not delivered) a portion of the manuscript, the defendants abandoned the project and repudiated their obligations. The jury brought in a verdict in favour of the plaintiff and £50 was awarded. There was no clear decision on whether the judgment in the plaintiff’s favour was to be supported on the ground of damages — for breach by the defendants — or for restitution. It is, however, clear that the court regarded restitution as available, and there are many later cases in which this has been treated as the actual decision. Thus, it has often been said that the mere fact of discharge for breach provides the plaintiff with a right to elect between suing for compensation and suing in restitution to recover the value of reliance expenditure or work done.137 The approach based on Planché creates a number of problems.138 First, the idea that the plaintiff is entitled to choose between restitution and damages is misconceived if it is suggested that the choice of one precludes the other. In fact, so long as the plaintiff does not recover the same sum twice,139 there is no objection to a plaintiff recovering both damages and restitution. Second, the cases run counter to the cases on unjust enrichment which explain that the benefit in respect of which the claim is made must have been accepted by the defendant. Apparently, in cases where the defendant breached the contract, the defendant is deemed to have accepted the benefit, by virtue of its actual or notional prevention of performance by the plaintiff. Third, there is no analysis of whether the defendant was in fact benefited. In Planché itself, the benefit bargained for under the contract must have been the completed manuscript. Since this was not received — and was in fact retained by the plaintiff — it is difficult to see how the defendant was enriched.140 Accordingly, the cases also appear to say that the defendant is deemed to have been benefited. This is unsatisfactory. Logically, the plaintiff should be restricted to a claim for damages.141 [page 926]
Position of party in breach [38-24] Recovery of money.142 The concept of total failure of consideration does not depend on the plaintiff not being in breach of contract. For example, assume a contract for the sale of land provides for instalment payments to be made by the purchaser. If the purchaser breaches the contract in such a way that the vendor is justified in electing to terminate, termination by the vendor results in a total failure of consideration. The purchaser is then entitled to recover payments made on the basis that the agreed return for the payments — conveyance of title — has totally failed.143 Since the total failure shows that the vendor was unjustly enriched, neither the fact that the purchaser has been let into possession nor the fact that the purchaser was in breach of contract prevents recovery.144 On the other hand, where the failure is less than total, the party in breach will be denied recovery. This is not because of the breach, but rather because145 a total failure is required for there to be an unjust enrichment. A court will not inquire into the value of the benefit. For example, in Shaw v Ball146 termination of a contract for the sale of a business did not cause a total failure of consideration because the purchaser had taken possession of the business and enjoyed its goodwill for a time. The goodwill was part of the performance for which the purchaser bargained, and having enjoyed it for a time he could not show that there had been a total failure of consideration. This approach means that a plaintiff will be denied restitution even if the sum paid to the defendant is out of all proportion to the benefit obtained by performance.147 In Dies v British and International Mining and Finance Corp Ltd148 Stable J suggested a wider principle in the context of a sale of goods contract. Although the decision is in fact explicable on the basis that there was on the facts a total failure of consideration, he said that a total failure of consideration is not required. However, this was doubted by the House of Lords in Hyundai Heavy Industries Co Ltd v Papadopoulos.149 On the other hand, a plaintiff who has been benefited will not be denied recovery unless the benefit was part of the agreed return for the payment. In other words, the benefit must have been bargained for under the contract. [page 927]
The total failure principle may be excluded by the parties’ agreement. Accordingly, if there is an express or implied term of the contract providing that any payment received may be forfeited, the plaintiff will be unable to rely on total failure of consideration as a basis for recovering the payment. In such cases the plaintiff must invoke principles governing relief against forfeiture.150 [38-25] Recovery as on a quantum meruit. Where the plaintiff is the party in breach, a restitutionary claim for the value of a non-monetary benefit conferred will not generally be available. Thus, where an employee is lawfully dismissed under a lump sum employment contract, the employer is not obliged to pay the value of the employee’s service prior to dismissal.151 The classic decision is Sumpter v Hedges,152 where the plaintiff abandoned a building contract after doing work on the defendant’s land. It was taken for granted that, as the contract was entire, the plaintiff was unable to recover on the contract.153 The plaintiff’s claim to a quantum meruit was rejected because it was impossible to imply a right of recovery while the contract between the parties governed their rights and obligations. In addition, the defendant had no choice but to accept the work as it had been done on his land.154 Therefore, no obligation to pay could be implied from the receipt of partial performance. However, when completing the work himself, the defendant had used certain building materials which the plaintiff had left on the ground. As the defendant had clearly accepted the benefit of these materials, which could have been returned, the plaintiff was entitled to be paid the value of these materials. In Sumpter v Hedges the court said that the express contractual provision for payment prevented reliance on a claim in the nature of quantum meruit, based on an implied promise to pay for the benefit conferred. This reasoning cannot now be accepted. Reliance on the implied promise reasoning will not do because the High Court has rejected the implied contract theory of restitution.155 The relevant question is whether the defendant was unjustly enriched at the plaintiff’s expense. Since the case has been approved by the High Court156 it would be difficult to say that adoption of the unjust enrichment concept is a sufficient basis for treating the decision as inapplicable today. The other basis for the decision was that the defendant did not freely accept the benefit of the plaintiff’s performance.157 Thus, unlike the position where the defendant is in breach of contract,158 the plaintiff must [page 928]
establish that the defendant had a free choice of whether to accept or reject the alleged benefit. Although this remains as an acceptable basis for the decision, unjust enrichment suggests two possible views. One is that in the absence of free acceptance the defendant is not, on facts conforming to that decision, benefited. The other view is that, although the defendant is benefited, the benefit is not an unjust one. It would seem that, because of the emphasis on acceptance in the Australian cases,159 the first view is correct, so that the absence of evidence of acceptance means that no issue of injustice arises. There will, however, be cases in which acceptance is established. The leading case is Steele v Tardiani.160 Steele employed the plaintiffs, who were released Italian internees during the second world war, to cut timber. Their performance was not in accordance with the contract, since it did not comply with a term specifying the dimensions of the timber. The High Court said that the contract was not an ‘entire’ contract. Rather it was ‘infinitely divisible’,161 with the contract price indicating the rate at which the cut timber was to be paid for. That did not help the plaintiffs in their contract claim. As Dixon J said,162 ‘each divisible application of the contract is entire and is only satisfied by performance, not partial, but substantially complete’. Although the plaintiffs cut 1500 tons of timber, their performance was not substantial under the doctrine discussed earlier,163 and recovery on the contract was not possible. To recover in respect of such timber the plaintiffs had to show ‘circumstances removing their right to remuneration from the exact conditions of the special contract’.164 This was Dixon J’s expression of the way of distinguishing Sumpter v Hedges. However, it was ‘not enough that the work has been beneficial’,165 in this case by turning standing timber into valuable firewood. The evidence had to be examined to see the circumstances under which Steele obtained that benefit. The evidence showed that the defendant had allowed the plaintiffs to leave their employment under the impression that he was not insisting on strict compliance with the contract. It also showed that he had stood by while the timber was cut and made no complaint, and subsequently sold the cut timber. Indeed, the point as to dimensions was only taken late in the day, during cross-examination. Therefore, the deviation from contract being acquiesced in, the conduct of the defendant could be regarded as ‘a taking of the benefit of the work and so, as involving either a dispensation from precise performance or an implication at law of a new obligation to pay the value of the work done’.166 The proper (modern) rationalisation of this
[page 929] decision is that, because the defendant had accepted the benefit of the plaintiffs’ work, he was unjustly enriched. Two law reform bodies have recommended a general reform, by treating benefit as a purely factual matter, not dependent on whether the contract is entire.167 However, this may go too far. On a rising market it takes away the incentive of the plaintiff to perform the contract. It also deprives the defendant of the main defence to a claim for incomplete work. At present, statutory bases are more limited.168
At the Expense of the Plaintiff169 [38-26] Primary and secondary senses of unjust enrichment. So far we have been dealing exclusively with cases where the benefit to the defendant is an increase in the defendant’s assets acquired at the expense of the plaintiff in the sense that the plaintiff’s assets have been correspondingly decreased. This is the ‘substantive’ or autonomous part of restitution law, where there is an imposed primary liability to make restitution. Where the only principles at work are those of the law of restitution, the ‘primary’ sense of unjust enrichment is at issue. This is an appropriate description not just because the benefit to the defendant is a ‘subtraction’ from the plaintiff’s assets but also, and more importantly, because the law does not rely on the identification of conduct as wrongful under the law of contract or tort. Thus, restitution is available — the defendant is unjustly enriched — whether or not the defendant has committed a wrong to the plaintiff.170 However, another — secondary — sense of unjust enrichment has been recognised,171 which relies on the fact that the defendant has committed a wrong. The secondary sense of ‘at the plaintiff’s expense’ relies on the fact that the defendant committed a wrong, such as a tort or a crime.172 In this [page 930] secondary sense the benefit is at the plaintiff’s expense because the defendant has benefited by reason of a wrong done to the plaintiff.173 Therefore, as
Professor Birks explains,174 there is a distinction between asserting a remedy on the ground of unjust enrichment — ignoring the wrong — and reliance on the wrong itself. Only if there is no independent unjust enrichment will it be essential for the plaintiff to rely on the wrong. There are two main types of case. In the first, the plaintiff relies on the wrong for the purpose of showing that a benefit obtained by the defendant was unjustly obtained, as where the benefit accrued as a result of the tort of deceit. The second relies on the contrast drawn earlier175 between primary and secondary obligations. If the defendant breached a primary duty arising in tort or contract the plaintiff is entitled to enforce a secondary obligation, namely, to pay damages. Although, as we also saw earlier,176 in contract the secondary duty is treated as one requiring the payment of compensation, in this branch of the law of restitution177 the idea is that the defendant may come under an obligation to pay restitutionary (rather than compensatory) damages. In other words, damages may be available, even though the plaintiff did not suffer a loss, if a benefit accrued to the defendant as a result of the wrong. Potentially, this analysis has very important implications for the assessment of damages in contract. The ultimate rationalisation is the need to prevent unjust enrichment, that is, to ensure that persons do not benefit from their own wrongs.178 However, it would be incorrect to say that there is a legal principle to the effect that a defendant who has obtained a benefit as a result of his or her own wrong must always pay restitutionary damages. So far, the cases in which restitutionary damages are available are fairly limited in scope. It is clear that the analysis is often applicable where a tort has been committed.179 It is also clear — although the cases do not rely heavily on unjust enrichment — that the obligation of a fiduciary to account for profits made in breach of the fiduciary relation produces the same result as restitutionary damages.180 On the other hand, the courts have usually denied that restitutionary damages can be recovered for a mere breach of contract.181 [38-27] Waiver of tort. In United Australia Ltd v Barclays Bank Ltd182 United Australia was the payee of a cheque payable to their order. It was received and endorsed by one Emons (their secretary) in favour of MFG [page 931] Trust Ltd. Subsequently, the cheque was received by Barclays who credited the
account of MFG at one of their branches. In fact, Emons had no authority to endorse the cheque in MFG’s favour. On these facts the House of Lords said that United Australia had a choice. They could sue MFG for the amount of the cheque, alleging that it had been endorsed without authority to recover the amount which it represented as restitution. Alternatively, they could sue Barclays in tort, and claim damages for conversion or negligence. Originally, United Australia had sued MFG in restitution, but this action had not been brought to judgment, and there was no obstacle to the claim in tort for conversion, and the recovery of damages.183 Under this analysis, the idea of ‘waiver of tort’ is misleading184 and three situations should be distinguished. First, where the basis for a claim in restitution is that the defendant both committed a wrong and received a benefit directly at the expense of the plaintiff (as would have been the position in a claim against MFG for restitution), the tort is asserted as the basis for a primary (but perhaps ‘dependent’) claim in restitution. Second, where the plaintiff seeks damages (which were available against MFG, and were recovered from Barclays) the tort is relied upon for the purpose of enforcing the secondary obligation to pay (restitutionary) damages. Third, the defendant may have held itself out as the agent of the plaintiff when committing the tort. If, by virtue of the wrong, the defendant has obtained a benefit, the plaintiff may adopt the conduct of the defendant by ratifying the agency. In neither of the first two cases is the tort actually ‘waived’. Instead, it is in both cases relied on, but for different remedies. However, the plaintiff cannot have both remedies, because that would lead to double recovery. Accordingly, the plaintiff must choose (elect) in favour of one or the other. The decision of the House of Lords was that United Australia had not made any election because it had not brought the claim against MFG to judgment. But had it done so the tort would have been ‘waived’ only in the limited sense of an election not to sue Barclays for its wrong. On the other hand, in the third situation — not applicable in the United Australia case — the tort is waived in the sense that it is extinguished. It is not a wrong at all, and the claim in restitution is justifiable simply on the basis that the money in the defendant’s hands was received as agent for the plaintiff. A breach of contract is not usually also a tort, and the waiver of tort analysis will rarely be applicable in the breach of contract context.185 However, if, for
example, a seller sells a specific motor car to a buyer, and although ownership in the vehicle has been transferred to the buyer, the seller purports to sell it to a third party, the seller’s conduct will amount both to a tort and a breach of contract. Moreover, since the tort is [page 932] conversion the buyer is entitled to restitutionary damages. Nevertheless, this is on the basis of the wrong to the buyer’s property interest rather than the seller’s breach of contract. Therefore, if the subject matter of the contract is unascertained goods, so that property cannot pass merely by virtue of the contract of sale, it is not meaningful to speak of the seller committing the tort of conversion. Even if the seller sells all of its stock to a third party, the buyer cannot claim restitutionary damages. [38-28] Breach of fiduciary obligation. The distinctive features of a fiduciary obligation are that the fiduciary must not abuse its position or, unless the beneficiary consents, allow interest and duty to conflict. The mischief which equity seeks to avoid is the ‘sacrifice’186 of the beneficiary’s interests. The high standard guards against actual and possible abuses of position. Accordingly, there is a breach of duty even if there is in fact no sacrifice.187 A person who, whether honestly or dishonestly, obtains a benefit as a result of the breach of a fiduciary relationship must therefore account to the other party (the beneficiary of the duty) for the amount of the benefit.188 Although usually justified by reference to the nature of the relationship rather than principles of restitution, there is no doubt that the liability of the fiduciary has a restitutionary character. Indeed, in the case of fiduciaries, equity requires restitution of a benefit which the beneficiary of the duty could not have made itself.189 It is because of the high standards which a fiduciary obligation attracts that the law imposes the greater incentive. Although an obligation to compensate for breaches of a duty no doubt serves to discourage breach, the imposition of an obligation going beyond compensation is a much greater disincentive. A contract may create a relationship which is also fiduciary, because it belongs to a class which is generally so regarded or because the particular circumstances justify the conclusion that the contractual relation is also of a fiduciary nature.190 It follows that the imposition of a duty to account for the amount of the benefit obtained in
breach of a fiduciary obligation may occur in the contract context.191 Therefore, where contracting parties are in a fiduciary relationship, and the defendant receives a bribe or secret commission, this may be recovered by the plaintiff.192 Generally, in contract the parties are concerned with their individual objectives (usually assumed to be profit based) and are not concerned to look after each other’s interests. By contrast, a fiduciary must give precedence to the beneficiary’s interests. It follows that, generally, [page 933] contracting parties do not stand in a fiduciary relationship to one another.193 Although the courts have been reluctant to impose a fiduciary relationship in ordinary commercial contracts,194 there is no doubt that this may occur. [38-29] Breach of contract as a wrong.195 In Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp196 Deane J, in his dissenting judgment, countenanced an award of restitution for breach of contract (on equitable principles) even though there was no breach of a fiduciary duty. There is, however, no general support for the treatment of a breach of contract as a wrong which justifies an award of restitutionary damages or an account of profits. For example, in Surrey County Council v Bredero Homes Ltd197 a local council (the plaintiff) sold land to a developer (the defendant). The contract contained a covenant requiring the defendant to limit the development to 72 houses, and planning permission was granted to build that number of houses. However, the defendant later applied for (and was granted) permission to build five additional houses. Although the plaintiff was required by statute to grant the permission, the conduct of the defendant was nevertheless a breach of contract. The plaintiff’s claim for damages was not based on any loss suffered, because there was no loss. Instead, the claim was for the sum which would have been a fair price for the relaxation of the covenant.198 In other words, the claim was for some of the profit which the defendant had made by breaching the contract. The claim was refused, on the basis that where a plaintiff has suffered no quantifiable loss or damage, only nominal damages can be awarded. This approach is also supported by a theory of ‘efficient breach’.199 This is an economic analysis which says that the law should assist the movement of resources to their highest value user. Therefore, a defendant should not be required to pay over money obtained in breaching a contract if this would
discourage conduct which is economically beneficial. Of course, the ‘efficient breach’ analysis pays little regard for a basic idea of contract, that [page 934] is, that promises should be performed. Accordingly, the real support for the current approach of the courts is based more on the primacy of the compensation principle than a concern to promote economic analysis.200 Accordingly, unless the breach is also an infringement of a property right, or the breach of a fiduciary duty, the compensation principle is applied. Recently, however, the House of Lords has distanced itself from the decision in Bredero. Lord Nicholls in Attorney-General v Blake201 said that it would be a ‘sorry reflection on the law’ if a defendant who had covenanted not to erect further houses was permitted to breach the obligation with impunity. In Blake, the majority held that an account of profits may in some cases be awarded for breach of contract.202 Although Blake did at one time owe a fiduciary duty to the Crown, and a duty to keep confidential the information which he obtained in connection with his employment by the Secret Intelligence Service, by the time the breach of contract occurred it was accepted that these duties had expired. All that remained was his lifelong undertaking not to divulge official information. That duty was breached when he published his autobiography. The reasoning of the majority to justify the conclusion that Blake was liable to account to the Crown is not easy to follow. Of course, the object was to ensure that Blake did not profit from his wrongdoing. Although the majority was not prepared to recognise account of profits as a general remedy for breach of contract, Lord Nicholls concluded that there was ‘in principle’ no reason to rule out the remedy in all cases.203 The precise basis for the actual decision was that Blake’s life-long undertaking was analogous to a fiduciary obligation.204 In the context of the intelligence services this was thought to be sufficient to justify the conclusion that, even though the information disclosed was not confidential, the award of an account of profits was available to the Crown.205 It remains to be seen whether the Australian courts will apply Blake. That can only occur at the level of the High Court.206 At present, the [page 935]
position remains that there is no obligation on a contracting party to account for profits made in breach of contract unless: the profit represents the plaintiff’s loss, in which case the damages award is compensatory in nature; the defendant breached a term of the contract to the effect that the plaintiff would receive the benefits obtained by the defendant — again, the damages are compensatory; the profit resulted from a wrongful dealing with the plaintiff’s property, bringing the principle of waiver of tort into play; or the profit was made in breach of a fiduciary obligation or a duty of confidence arising from the contract.
Injustice [38-30] Generally. Assuming that the other requirements of unjust enrichment have been satisfied, the final element is whether it was unjust for the defendant to receive (or retain) the benefit. The suspicion which has surrounded the unjust enrichment concept is almost certainly due to the fear that its adoption would result in great uncertainty, by an unprincipled approach to restitutionary claims. The discussion of the ideas of ‘benefit’ and ‘at the expense of’ clearly shows that the law is anything but unprincipled. So also with the requirement of injustice. One significant feature of Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul207 is Deane J’s statement208 that adopting unjust enrichment does not amount to the assertion of a ‘judicial discretion to do whatever idiosyncratic notions of what is fair and just might dictate’. Injustice is not determined simply by asking where the merits of the case lie. Instead, injustice is determined by the interaction of principle, precedent and policy. The rule is that a recognised basis for the conclusion must be found. In the contract context, careful attention must be paid to the bargain. If the parties have expressed their intention on how the benefit is to be dealt with this must be respected. Some cases will be very easy indeed. Assume that A makes a giftof $100 to B. B has obtained a benefit at A’s expense, but there is no question of A obtaining restitution. The circumstances of the payment — the fact of gift— indicate that the receipt is not an unjust enrichment of B. The same is true where A pays money to B in discharge of a contractual obligation. If A has received the agreed return for the payment, no question of unjust enrichment can arise. On the other
hand, where A pays money to B as a result of mistake, there is no doubt that, prima facie, the receipt is an unjust enrichment of B. We have already seen the operation of two important bases for the conclusion that the defendant’s enrichment was unjust: total failure of consideration;209 and acceptance of benefit.210 [page 936] The discussion below deals with the impact of contractual provisions and statute in relation to those bases. [38-31] Effect of provision for forfeiture. A contract may include an express or implied provision to the effect that a benefit conferred by the plaintiff’s performance is to be retained (forfeited) by the defendant if the plaintiff breaches the contract. If the contract is terminated for the plaintiff’s breach of contract, restitution on the basis of a total failure of consideration is excluded by a provision for forfeiture. If restitution is to be ordered it must be based on rules governing relief against forfeiture.211 Typically, the benefit will be monetary, for example, part payments under a sale of land contract or a money deposit.212 [38-32] Relief against forfeiture. If the defendant terminated the performance of the contract for breach or repudiation by the plaintiff, and has forfeited any payments made, the plaintiff may apply for relief against forfeiture.213 Assume that a contract for the sale of land provides for instalment payments to be made by the purchaser, and that there is a provision for the forfeiture of payments made by the purchaser. There is support for the application of an equitable principle permitting restitution in respect of the payments made. Thus, in McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd214 Dixon J said that ‘in equity such a contract is considered to involve a forfeiture from which the purchaser is entitled to be relieved’. For example, in Pitt v Curotta215 Long Innes J granted the plaintiff relief (on terms) against the forfeiture of moneys (other than the deposit) paid under a contract for the sale of land on the basis that an express provision for forfeiture was in the nature of a penalty. In Tropical Traders Ltd v Goonan,216 the High Court granted a purchaser of land liberty to apply for relief
against the forfeiture of instalments paid under a contract for the sale of land where the vendor had terminated performance because the purchaser had failed to comply with an essential time stipulation.217 There seems no reason why these cases should not be applied to contracts dealing with goods or services. In Stockloser v Johnson218 a [page 937] majority of the English Court of Appeal rejected the view that termination is conclusive against a plaintiff unless there is fraud or sharp practice. Denning LJ recognised the possibility that a buyer of goods might be granted relief against an express provision for forfeiture. He said219 that if the sum in question is in the nature of a penalty and the buyer possesses an ‘equity of restitution’ because it would be ‘unconscionable’ for the seller to retain the money, relief will be granted.220 [38-33] Deposit payments. A deposit paid under a void or ineffective contract will usually be recoverable by the plaintiff, on the basis of the intention of the parties or as restitution to reverse an unjust enrichment. For example, if the existence of a binding contract is subject to the occurrence of an unfulfilled contingency, a deposit paid is recoverable.221 But the contingency need not relate to formation. For example, in Clifton v Coffey222 the plaintiff agreed to purchase the lease, goodwill and so on, of a hotel partly out of money to be advanced by a brewery company. The company failed to advance any money and the contract was held to be discharged and to that extent was ineffective. There was no default by the plaintiff and the High Court held that he was entitled to recover a deposit which he had paid to the defendant. Similar principles apply where the contract, although valid, is abandoned by the parties.223 Where the plaintiff has terminated the performance of a contract for breach or repudiation on the part of the defendant, any deposit paid by the plaintiff is recoverable.224 There are, however, two situations in which the deposit may not be recoverable. One is where illegality is present, or the ineffectiveness of the contract arises from a statutory provision which forbids restitution of the deposit.225 The other is where the plaintiff’s wrongful conduct caused the contract to be ineffective.226 Thus, the general approach, where a breach or repudiation on the part of the plaintiff has led to termination by the
[page 938] defendant, is to refuse recovery. The express or implied provision for forfeiture of a conventional deposit, usually 10 per cent, will be respected and the retention of such a sum will not be considered unjust. However, the simple proposition that breach is generally conclusive should not detract attention from some very significant issues created by advance payments made under a contract. Three points are important.227 First, as Hale J recognised in Coates v Sarich,228 there is a distinction between payments described as ‘deposits’ but not subject to any express provision for forfeiture and payments similarly described but subject to an express forfeiture provision. In respect of the former, the question is whether the court should imply a right of forfeiture. The amount of the payment is important in deciding whether the payment was accurately described. In the latter case, since there is an express forfeiture, the question is whether the court has jurisdiction to grant relief against the forfeiture provision, and the amount of the deposit may be important. Second, there is support for granting a plaintiff relief against the forfeiture of an ‘extravagant’ deposit. If the payment is large, having regard to the circumstances, restitution may be awarded if the defendant has acted unconscionably in purporting to forfeit what is, in effect, a penalty.229 The fact that the payment is described as a ‘deposit’ does not, therefore, preclude the possibility of recovery.230 Even so, the usual approach has been for the court to permit the defendant to retain out of the deposit an amount which would not be extravagant.231 Third, where relief against forfeiture is relevant, it will be necessary to have regard to the particular circumstances of the case. For example, in Smyth v Jessep232 Monahan AJ granted relief against the forfeiture of a deposit which, on one interpretation of the agreement, represented 40 per cent of the purchase money payable under two contracts for the sale of land. Applying Denning LJ’s statement in Stockloser v Johnson,233 he said that, tested at the time of the agreement, the sum sought to be forfeited was penal in nature. When the forfeiture provision was invoked there was an ‘equity of restitution’ operating in the purchaser’s favour, by reason of an element of unconscionable conduct. Monahan AJ gave effect to the purchaser’s equity of restitution by relieving him from the forfeiture provision. The vendors were protected by an order for damages including, but not confined to, the difference between the net value of
the land and the contract price. On the other hand, a sum which looks to be penal may be found, on examination, to be legitimately forfeited. Thus, in Re [page 939] Hoobin234 O’Bryan J refused relief against forfeiture of a 25 per cent deposit paid under a contract for sale of a hotel freehold. He did not regard the sum as a penalty, since the balance of the price was payable eight years after possession was given, and the contract permitted re-sale by the purchaser. Although sceptical of Denning LJ’s statements in Stockloser, he added that there was no evidence of unfair conduct. [38-34] Statute. The decision whether to make an order for restitution may, as was indicated earlier,235 be affected by statutory provisions. For example, in Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul236 the High Court had to consider whether the statutory prohibition on enforcement of the contract extended to a claim in the nature of restitution. Although this was treated as purely a matter of statutory interpretation, an argument may be made that the scope of the statutory provision was part and parcel of the unjust enrichment analysis, in particular the element of injustice. Another example, directly relevant to the recovery of deposit payments, is s 55(2A) of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW)237 which provides that in every case where the court ‘refuses to grant specific performance’ of a contract for the sale of land, or in any proceedings for the return of a deposit, the court may, if it thinks fit, ‘order the repayment of any deposit with or without interest thereon’. An order may be made, in the discretion of the court, even if the defendant (vendor under the contract) has exercised a contractual right to forfeit the deposit.238 The basic issue under the provision is whether it would be ‘unjust and inequitable’239 to permit the defendant to retain the deposit. If, for example, the defendant has been guilty of unconscionable conduct, there is a basis on which the court can exercise its discretion in the plaintiff’s favour.240 In such a situation forfeiture of the deposit would unjustly enrich the defendant.241 [page 940]
Adjustment and Valuation Issues242 General [38-35] Time and basis for valuation. Of the restitutionary claims discussed above, an issue of valuation will arise where the plaintiff is successful in a claim based on the defendant’s receipt (and retention) of a non-monetary benefit.243 Unless based on a subsequent realisation of benefit, the appropriate date for valuation of such claims is generally the date of receipt.244 The usual description of the basis for valuation is the market or current price of the work done or services rendered in conferring the benefit.245 This will contain an element of profit. It applies in all cases where the basis for restitution is the defendant’s acceptance of benefit.246 However, in cases of ‘incontrovertible benefit’, the amount by which the defendant’s assets are increased is the appropriate measure, unless this exceeds the value of the work done. An example would be the increase in the value of the defendant’s land resulting from services rendered.247 The most controversial issue in relation to valuation, namely, the relevance of the contract price, is dealt with separately.248 [38-36] Adjustment. Adjustments required where a restitutionary claim succeeds in relation to a benefit obtained under an ineffective contract are of various kinds.249 However, they fall into two main categories. First, on the success of either party, it may be necessary to consider the impact on damages claims. For example, in Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov)250 the High Court pointed out that since the plaintiff’s damages award included a component representing the loss incurred in paying for a cruise which was cut short due to the defendant’s breach of contract, an adjustment would have been necessary had the plaintiff also been entitled to restitution of the fare. Second, adjustment is necessary where the ‘price’ of rescission of a contract is restitutio in integrum. Whenever a contract is rescinded (or set aside) for a vitiating factor, and the parties are restored to their pre[page 941]
contractual positions, the plaintiff must make restitution.251 As Isaacs and Rich JJ pointed out in Brown v Smitt,252 ‘[o]ne condition is always inseparable from rescission — restitution by the plaintiff to the defendant of the property transferred’. Expressed in terms of the unjust enrichment concept, the requirement is one of counter-restitution to ensure that the plaintiff is not unjustly enriched at the defendant’s expense.253 A total failure of consideration need not be established in relation to money paid under the contract, and a merely partial failure may lead to a successful claim in restitution. Under the modern law, the requirement is one of substantial restitution. For example, assume that a contract for the sale of land is rescinded by the purchaser for the misleading or deceptive conduct of the vendor. If an order is made for restitution of the price paid, the purchaser must also make restitution of benefits obtained. Accordingly, substantial restitution will be achieved by orders, for example, that the purchaser pay for benefits obtained by use of the land. More generally, as we saw earlier,254 rescission of a contract will be ordered (or confirmed) so long as orders for adjustment do what is practically just between the parties.255 On the other hand, restitutio in integrum is not a general requirement for valid termination, because parties are not restored to former positions on discharge.256 Therefore, counter-restitution is not insisted on in this context. There are, however, exceptional cases where the substantial restitution requirement does apply. For example, if a contract for the sale of land is discharged, restitution may be claimed in respect of permanent improvements made to the land while the purchaser was in possession257 even though the improvements were not requested. Again, as Dixon J said in McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd,258 where a plaintiff is granted relief against forfeiture, the plaintiff must submit to equity as a condition of obtaining relief. Terms will therefore be imposed, and although the plaintiff is entitled to restitution, the plaintiff must make restitution to the defendant, so as to achieve substantial restitution.259 Finally, counter-restitution may be required under statute.260 [page 942]
Relevance of Contract Price [38-37] Evidence of value. As a general principle, the contract, or so much of it
as was the subject of negotiation, may be referred to when valuing the plaintiff’s claim even if the contract was inherently ineffective. It may be relevant as evidence of: what was requested; the extent to which the performance corresponds to what was in fact requested;261 and the value of the work done or services rendered.262 However, evidence is not restricted to the contract price. Indeed, in cases such as Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul,263 where the contract price is in terms of ‘prevailing’ rates of payment, there is no course open, unless the parties have agreed on a value, other than to obtain evidence of the market price. More controversial is whether the contract price should constitute a ceiling on the plaintiff’s recovery. Account must be taken of the basis upon which the contract is found to be ineffective. [38-38] Unenforceable and void contracts. Where the restitutionary claim arises from the acceptance of work or services amounting to the full performance of an unenforceable contract, the claim will not be permitted to exceed the contract price. The obvious justification for this is that, usually, unenforceability results from statute. It would be absurd to suggest that the plaintiff is in a better position where the contract does not comply with the statute than if the statute had been complied with. Thus, in Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul264 Deane J said that the contract price is a limit in cases involving fully performed contracts unenforceable by reason of statute. The same is true where the unenforceable contract is partially performed, although in such a case the plaintiff may be limited to the proportion of the contract price which represents the extent of work done or services rendered. Where the contract is void there is less justification for treating the contract price as a limitation, because the negotiations may not have been complete. Indeed, if the reason for voidness is a failure to agree on price, it would be wrong to say that the plaintiff is limited to whatever sum was discussed during negotiations. But where voidness is due to a factor which does not affect the parties’ agreement on price, it may represent the maximum sum recoverable.265 And, where the contract (although fully [page 943]
negotiated) is void under statute, the price will generally — on policy grounds — constitute a ceiling on recovery. [38-39] Discharged contracts. The problem is more acute where the contract is discharged (terminated) for breach or repudiation. We saw earlier266 that in cases where the claim is brought against a defendant in breach, the claim in restitution is based on the plaintiff’s ability to choose between restitution and damages. As originally conceived, this was a choice between rescission of the contract (ab initio) and enforcement of the contract in a claim for damages. Thus, in De Bernardy v Harding267 the plaintiff agreed to sell tickets to view the funeral of the Duke of Wellington. After the plaintiff had spent money in employing clerks and so on, but before any tickets had been sold, the defendant repudiated his obligations. The plaintiff returned the tickets and sued to recover a reasonable sum for the work done and expenses incurred. The court considered that the plaintiff was entitled to recover in restitution for the work actually done, on the basis of rescission ab initio. The same reasoning is found in some Australian cases. For example, in Brooks Robinson Pty Ltd v Rothfield268 the plaintiffs contracted to build a cocktail cabinet and to install it in the defendant’s house. After the work had been partially completed the defendant repudiated the contract. The plaintiffs sued to recover the reasonable value of the work completed and the court held that they were entitled to recover on a quantum meruit basis. The impact is that the contract price is not a limitation, and the plaintiff may therefore recover a substantial sum even if a claim for damages would have resulted in the recovery of a nominal sum. Thus, in Brooks Robinson, because the contract was treated as rescinded, it was no answer to such a claim that the contract would have been unprofitable. In coming to this conclusion the court followed Slowey v Lodder.269 In that case a contractor was allowed to elect between damages and restitution (on a quantum meruit), after the defendants breached the contract and excluded the contractor from the site, thereby preventing him from completing the work. Although the trial judge refused to award more than a nominal sum as damages, because there was no evidence that the contract would have been profitable, and also rejected the claim for restitution, the Court of Appeal of New Zealand disagreed. The Privy Council affirmed the Court of Appeal’s decision.270 That the contract must be rescinded (rather than merely discharged) to achieve this result is confirmed by a line of United States cases of which Boomer v Muir271 is the best known. Although the plaintiff’s damages claim would have amounted to about $20,000, his suit on a
quantum meruit brought him $250,000. This was justified by the view272 that, as a ‘rescinded contract ceases to exist for all purposes’, the [page 944] amount fixed as the contract price was not a restriction on the restitution claim. It is, however, now absolutely clear that (under Australian law) a plaintiff is not entitled to rescind (rather than terminate) a contract for breach or repudiation.273 On this basis alone one would have thought that the reasoning in the above cases should now be regarded as erroneous. However, in Renard Constructions (ME) Pty Ltd v Minister for Public Works,274 the New South Wales Court of Appeal held that although a schedule of rates building contract was merely discharged by the contractor, the contract price was not a ceiling on recovery. Accordingly, and notwithstanding that the work was only partially completed, the contractor’s award of reasonable remuneration was, when combined with the payments made under the contract, substantially in excess of the contract price. Slowey was approved on the basis that it is not open to a defendant in breach of contract to set up the contract price as a term operating in its favour. This approach has been confirmed in the later cases.275 For a number of reasons it is suggested that it is not satisfactory.276 To begin with, the reason why the contract was ineffective — discharge for breach — does not impugn the parties’ initial risk allocation. It is therefore impossible to see how the contract price can be ignored. There is, in other words, no justification for allowing the contractor to deny the agreed price as the maximum sum available for the work required under the contract.277 Second, the suggestion that a party in breach of contract cannot put forward the terms of the bargain as a defence to the claim is inconsistent with the exclusion clause cases. As we have seen,278 where a contract is terminated a clause may restrict the plaintiff’s non-contractual rights in the same way as it restricts contractual rights. Third, from the restitutionary perspective, in claims for restitution brought against defendants in breach, there is no real analysis of ‘acceptance of benefit’. The receipt of the contractual performance is regarded as a benefit even if ‘acceptance’ is merely referable to the defendant’s obligation to accept a
performance complying with the contract. Since this is acceptance under the contract, it is proper to regard the contract as setting a limit on recovery. The position is otherwise, however, if the facts indicate an acceptance which is truly independent of the contract, since in such cases there is a genuine restitutionary liability. 1.
See [38-05].
2.
Sir Anthony Mason, ‘Book Review’ (1989) 1 JCL 265.
3.
See [38-08].
4.
See, eg Sinclair v Brougham [1914] AC 398.
5.
See, eg Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd [1943] AC 32 at 47.
6.
See further [38-08].
7.
See [1-05].
8.
[1941] AC 1 at 29.
9.
[1943] AC 32 at 63.
10.
(1912) 14 CLR 17 at 25.
11.
(1760) 2 Burr 1005 at 1012; 97 ER 676 at 681.
12.
See, eg [9-20], [15-16] (claims where contract unenforceable for want of writing or capacity); [2707], [27-17], [27-20], [27-27]–[27-28], cf [27-21]–[27-24] (claims enforceable notwithstanding that contract void tainted with illegality); Chapter 34 (restitution following frustration); [37-29], [37-32], [37-34], [37-35], [37-37], [37-38], [37-40] (claim in restitution as defence to recovery of liquidated sum following termination for breach or repudiation).
13.
See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, ch 4.
14.
Cf [20-09].
15.
See further [38-09].
16.
For analysis see Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, Pt VII.
17.
See further [38-36] (restitutio in integrum). Reference may also be made to [9-20] (statutory policy); [27-27]–[27-28] (illegality); [18-42]–[18-62] (restrictions on rescission); [31-01]–[31-12], [3115]–[31-18] (restrictions on termination).
18.
See [32-05], [35-01].
19.
But see [38-26].
20.
See Re Goldcorp Exchange Ltd [1995] 1 AC 74. But sometimes the claim is proprietary in character. See generally Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 242–7, 1727–34.
21.
Cf Andrew Kull, ‘Restitution and the Noncontractual Transfer’ (1997) 11 JCL 93 (and see Keith Mason, ‘Commentary on “Restitution and the Noncontractual Transfer”’ (1997) 11 JCL 111).
22.
See, eg J Gadsden Pty Ltd v Strider 1 Ltd (The AES Express) (1990) 20 NSWLR 57 (see David Fung (1991) 4 JCL 273).
23.
(2008) 232 CLR 635; 247 ALR 412; [2008] HCA 27. See Mitch Riley, ‘The Conceptual Relationship
Between Contract Law and Unjust Enrichment and the Decision in Lumbers v Cook’ (2011) 28 JCL 267. 24.
Cf [35-12].
25.
See, eg Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul (1987) 162 CLR 221 at 256; 69 ALR 577; Foran v Wight (1989) 168 CLR 385 at 413, 432; 88 ALR 413; Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1993) 176 CLR 344 at 356, 385; 111 ALR 289.
26.
Lumbers v W Cook Builders Pty Ltd (in liq) (2008) 232 CLR 635 at 671; 247 ALR 412; [2008] HCA 27 at [111] per the High Court.
27.
See [7-10]–[7-13]. See Cobbe v Yeoman’s Row Management Ltd [2008] 1 WLR 1752; [2008] UKHL 55 (see Amy Goymour [2009] CLJ 37; Andrew Lodder (2010) 126 LQR 42). See generally D Y K Fung, Pre-contractual Liability Rights and Remedies: Resitution and Promissory Estoppel, 1999. See also J M Perillo, ‘Restitution in a Contractual Context’ (1973) 73 Col L Rev 1208.
28.
However, such a clause is not conclusive. See [38-32], [38-33].
29.
See further [38-37]–[38-39].
30.
See generally [34-01]–[34-42].
31.
See generally [34-13]–[34-22].
32.
See generally [24-15]–[24-31].
33.
See, eg Contracts Review Act 1980 (NSW), s 8 and Sch 1.
34.
See [24-18]. See also [38-34] (statutory power operates to order the return of a deposit).
35.
See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, ch 1.
36.
See Fifoot, History and Sources of the Common Law, 1949, pp 368ff.
37.
Bullen and Leake, Precedents of Pleadings, 3rd ed, 1868, p 35.
38.
See further [38-07].
39.
See Ben Kremer, ‘The Action for Money Had and Received’ (2001) 17 JCL 93.
40.
See Chapter 6.
41.
See [37-29]. See also [20-15].
42.
[1923] 2 KB 500.
43.
See, eg Hunt v Silk (1804) 5 East 449; 102 ER 1142; Street v Blay (1831) 2 B & Ad 456; 109 ER 1212.
44.
The sale of goods legislation preserves this right of recovery. See Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW), s 55 (for corresponding provisions see [35-44]). Cf Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic), s 25(5). See also [32-07], [34-11].
45.
See McDougall v Aeromarine of Emsworth Ltd [1958] 1 WLR 1126; Berger & Co Inc v Gill & Duffus SA [1984] 1 AC 382 at 395. For an express provision to this effect in the consumer context see Australian Consumer Law and Fair Trading Act 2012 (Vic), s 25(4).
46.
See [28-25].
47.
(1871) LR 6 CP 78.
48.
(1992) 175 CLR 353 at 383; 109 ALR 57. See also Goss v Chilcott [1996] AC 788 where this dictum was applied (see J W Carter and Gregory Tolhurst (1997) 11 JCL 162).
49.
(2001) 208 CLR 516; 185 ALR 335. See J Beatson and G J Virgo, (2002) 118 LQR 352; J W Carter
and Gregory Tolhurst, (2003) 19 JCL 287; Tang Hang Wu, ‘Unjust Enrichment Within a Valid Contract: a Close Look at Roxborough v Rothmans of Pall Mall Australia Ltd’ (2007) 23 JCL 201. 50.
See [38-32].
51.
See further [38-24].
52.
See Bullen and Leake, Precedents of Pleadings, 3rd ed, 1868, p 40.
53.
Simpson, A History of the Common Law of Contract, 1975, p 65.
54.
(1987) 162 CLR 221.
55.
See [9-20].
56.
Mason CJ and Wilson J substantially agreed.
57.
(1987) 162 CLR 221 at 256.
58.
See generally [9-19]–[9-20].
59.
(1939) 39 SR (NSW) 305 at 320.
60.
Where a plaintiff sought to recover a reasonable price for goods sold the claim was formerly referred to as a quantum valebat. However, as a consequence of the sale of goods legislation (see [38-18]), very little is heard of this terminology today.
61.
See further [38-20]–[38-25].
62.
See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter's Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, ch 1.
63.
(1987) 162 CLR 221.
64.
In England, see Lipkin Gorman v Karpnale Ltd [1991] 2 AC 548 (see Peter Birks, ‘The English Recognition of Unjust Enrichment’ [1991] LMCLQ 473); Woolwich Equitable Building Society v IRC [1993] AC 70.
65.
(1987) 162 CLR 221 at 256–7. See also at 227; Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd v Westpac Banking Corp (1988) 164 CLR 662 at 673; 78 ALR 157.
66.
A coherent theory is presented by Birks, An Introduction to the Law of Restitution, 1985, but not everyone has welcomed the concept. See, eg Steve Hedley, ‘Unjust Enrichment as the Basis of Restitution — An Overworked Concept’ (1985) 5 Legal Studies 56; S J Stoljar, ‘Unjust Enrichment and Unjust Sacrifice’ (1987) 50 MLR 603.
67.
(2012) 286 ALR 12; [2012] HCA 7.
68.
On whether a plaintiff is able to plead the unjust enrichment concept and particularise its elements in order to lay the foundation for proof of the claim in court see Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 305–9. Cf Cressman v Coys of Kensington (Sales) Ltd [2004] 1 WLR 2775 at 2785–6.
69.
See Farah Constructions Pty Ltd v Say-Dee Pty Ltd (2006) 230 CLR 89 at 156; 236 ALR 209 at 256; [2007] HCA 22 at [150].
70.
See [38-02].
71.
(2008) 232 CLR 635 at 662; 247 ALR 412; [2008] HCA 27 at [78]. See also Friend v Brooker (2009) 239 CLR 129 at 141; 255 ALR 601 at 604; [2009] HCA 21 at [7]; Bofinger v Kingsway Group Ltd (2009) 239 CLR 269 at 299, 300; 260 ALR 71 at 90, 91; [2009] HCA 44 at [86], [89]. But cf Sempra Metals Ltd (formerly Metallgesellschaft Ltd) v Inland Revenue Commissioners [2008] 1 AC 561 at 584; [2007] UKHL 34 at [31].
72.
Specific restitution may be ignored.
73.
Sometimes termed ‘subjective devaluation’. See Birks, An Introduction to the Law of Restitution, 1985, pp 109ff.
74.
Lumbers v W Cook Builders Pty Ltd (in liq) (2008) 232 CLR 635 at 666; 247 ALR 412; [2008] HCA 27 at [89]; Edwards v Australian Securities and Investments Commission (2009) 264 ALR 723 at 748; [2009] NSWCA 424 at [138].
75.
(1987) 162 CLR 221 (see [38-08]).
76.
Cf ABB Power Generation v Chapple (2001) 25 WAR 158 at 167 (request may be tacit).
77.
See [38-12]–[38-15].
78.
Cf [3-29].
79.
Certainly many of the old cases can be explained on this basis. See, eg [38-25].
80.
See [38-10].
81.
See [38-12].
82.
Cf Rowe v Vale of White Horse District Council [2003] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 418 at 421.
83.
Cf Craven-Ellis v Canons Ltd [1936] 2 KB 403 (see [38-18]).
84.
See [38-36].
85.
See generally Birks, An Introduction to the Law of Restitution, 1985, pp 117ff; Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 151–153, 932.
86.
[1936] 2 KB 403. See further [38-18] (acceptance).
87.
[1936] 2 KB 403 at 412.
88.
See G J Tolhurst and J W Carter, ‘Acceptance of Benefit as a Basis for Restitution’ (2002) 18 JCL 52.
89.
See further [38-22], [38-25].
90.
The main cases are Steele v Tardiani (1946) 72 CLR 386 at 402; Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul (1987) 162 CLR 221 at 227–8, 229, 255–6, 257, 259, 260, 262–3, 264; Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1993) 176 CLR 344 at 374.
91.
See Rowe v Vale of White Horse District Council [2003] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 418 at 422. See also Birks, An Introduction to the Law of Restitution, 1985, pp 114, 266, 283.
92.
See, eg Damberg v Damberg (2001) 52 NSWLR 492 at 528–30 (context of void contract). See also Cressman v Coys of Kensington (Sales) Ltd [2004] 1 WLR 2775 at 2788–9.
93.
(1987) 162 CLR 221 (see [38-08]).
94.
See H O Hunter and J W Carter, ‘Quantum Meruit and Building Contracts — Part I’ (1989) 2 JCL 95.
95.
See J Beatson, ‘Benefit, Reliance and the Structure of Unjust Enrichment’ [1987] CLP 71.
96.
See Brenner v First Artists’ Management Pty Ltd [1993] 2 VR 221; Independent Grocers Cooperative Ltd v Noble Lowndes Superannuation Consultants Ltd (1993) 60 SASR 525.
97.
See generally Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, ch 10.
98.
See, eg Alistair Wyvill, ‘Enrichment, Restitution and the Collapsed Negotiations Cases’ (1993) 11 Aust Bar Rev 93; Sharon Christensen, ‘Recovery for Work Performed in Anticipation of Contract: Is Reliance an Element of Benefit?’ (1993) 11 Aust Bar Rev 144.
99.
See J W Carter, ‘Ineffective Transactions’ in Finn, ed, Essays on Restitution, 1990, p 206; Peter Birks, ‘Restitution after Ineffective Contracts: Issues for the 1990s’ (1990) 2 JCL 227.
100. [1977] 2 NSWLR 880 (see J D Davies [1981] OJLS 300).
101. [1977] 2 NSWLR 880 at 903. It is not clear whether Sheppard J was treating restitution as a form of compensation. Cf Austotel Pty Ltd v Franklins Selfserve Pty Ltd (1989) 16 NSWLR 582 at 621. 102. Cf Earhart v William Low Co 600 P 2d 1344 (1979). See also J P Dawson, ‘Restitution Without Enrichment’ (1981) 61 Boston ULR 563. 103. Cf Sir Anthony Mason and S J Gageler, ‘The Contract’ in Finn, ed, Essays on Contract, 1987, pp 15– 16. See also [1-13]. 104. (1988) 164 CLR 387; 76 ALR 513 (see [7-12]). 105. See [7-19]–[7-23]. 106. See J W Carter, ‘Contract, Restitution and Promissory Estoppel’ (1989) 12 UNSWLJ 30. Cf Gareth Jones, ‘Claims Arising Out of Anticipated Contracts Which Do Not Materialize’ (1980) 18 U W Ontario LR 447 at 457 (analogy of proprietary estoppel). But cf Peter Birks, ‘Restitution for Services’ [1974] CLP 13 at 16. Other concepts may operate. See generally Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1042–7. 107. (1981) [1984] 1 All ER 504. 108. See S N Ball, ‘Work Carried Out in Pursuance of Letters of Intent — Contract or Restitution?’ (1983) 99 LQR 572. 109. See [38-35]–[38-39]. 110. See Marston Construction Co Ltd v Kigass Ltd (1989) 46 BLR 109 and Regalian Properties Plc v London Docklands Development Corp [1995] 1 WLR 212 (see Paul Key (1995) 111 LQR 576); Edwards v Australian Securities and Investments Commission (2009) 264 ALR 723 at 749; [2009] NSWCA 424 at [141]. 111. But it may be possible, in cases where the understanding is that the work is to be paid for, to infer agreement to a collateral contract dealing with the preparatory work. See Turriff Construction Ltd v Regalia Knitting Mills Ltd [1972] EG (Dig) 257. 112. But see Ewan McKendrick, ‘The Battle of the Forms and the Law of Restitution’ (1988) 8 OJLS 197. 113. See Ben Kremer, ‘Recovering Money Under Void Contracts: “Absence of Consideration” and Failure of Consideration’ (2001) 17 JCL 37. 114. See Svanosio v McNamara (1956) 96 CLR 186 at 207. See also George v Roach (1942) 67 CLR 253 (failure of condition precedent to the existence of a contract). 115. See Kleinwort Benson Ltd v Lincoln City Council [1999] 2 AC 349 (contract fully performed). Cf David Securities Pty Ltd v Commonwealth Bank of Australia (1992) 175 CLR 353 (mistake of law is now the same as a mistake of fact for the purposes of restitution). 116. [1957] VR 509. 117. [1936] 2 KB 403. See [38-18]. 118. [1936] 2 KB 403 at 409. Cf A T Denning, ‘Quantum Meruit: The Case of Craven-Ellis v Canons Ltd’ (1939) 55 LQR 54. 119. [1993] 2 VR 221. See also Andrew Shelton & Co Pty Ltd v Alpha Healthcare Ltd (2002) 5 VR 577. 120. See May and Butcher Ltd v R (1929) [1934] 2 KB 17n, and generally [4-10]–[4-12]. 121. See ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 13(2); NSW: Sale of Goods Act 1923, s 13(2); NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 13(2); Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 11(2); SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 8(2); Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 13(2); Vic: Goods Act 1958, s 13(2); WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 8(2). 122. The provision refers to other situations where the seller would otherwise be required to bring a claim
for restitution based on the buyer’s acceptance of the goods. 123. See [9-20]. See also [38-08] and J W Carter, ‘Services Rendered Under Ineffective Contracts’ [1990] LMCLQ 495. 124. See generally Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, ch 11; J W Carter, ‘Discharged Contracts: Claims for Restitution’ (1997) 11 JCL 130. 125. See [37-34]. The buyer retains the right to claim damages for breach. 126. See [28-22]. 127. For the position where neither party is in breach see Chapter 34 (restitution following frustration). 128. See [38-06]. 129. But see [38-06]. 130. See Fibrosa Spolka Akcyjna v Fairbairn Lawson Combe Barbour Ltd [1943] AC 32 at 64–5; Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1993) 176 CLR 344 at 375; Roxborough v Rothmans of Pall Mall Australia Ltd (2001) 208 CLR 516 (see [38-06]). 131. (1993) 176 CLR 344 (see [36-09]). See Jane Swanton (1993) 67 ALJ 379; Hugh Stowe [1993] CLJ 384; Kit Barker [1993] LMCLQ 291; J W Carter and Gregory Tolhurst (1994) 7 JCL 273. 132. Contrast the position of a party in breach: [38-24]. 133. (1956) 73 WN (NSW) 307. 134. (1992) 26 NSWLR 234. 135. See, eg Goodman v Pocock (1850) 15 QB 576 at 580, 582, 583; 117 ER 577 at 579, 580; Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v Watson (1946) 72 CLR 435 at 450, 462. 136. (1831) 8 Bing 14; 131 ER 305. See Charles Mitchell and Charlotte Mitchell, ‘Planché v Colburn (1831)’, in Mitchell and Mitchell, eds, Landmark Cases in the Law of Restitution, 2006, p 65. 137. See, eg Ettridge v Vermin Board of the District of Murat Bay [1928] SASR 124 at 131; Brooks Robinson Pty Ltd v Rothfield [1951] VLR 405 (see [38-39]); Bolwell Fibreglass Pty Ltd v Foley [1984] VR 97 at 114. 138. Cf [38-15]. See further [38-39]. 139. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1405, 1410, 1411, 1738–9. 140. This looks to allow restitution for reliance loss. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1168, 1408. Cf [38-39]. 141. Cf Commonwealth of Australia v Amann Aviation Pty Ltd (1991) 174 CLR 64; 104 ALR 1 (see [3511]). 142. See J W Carter and G J Tolhurst, ‘Conditional Payments and Failure of Consideration: Contract or Restitution?’ (2001) 9 APLR 1. 143. McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 470, 478. See also Mayson v Clouet [1924] AC 980; Frankcombe v Foster Investments Pty Ltd [1978] 2 NSWLR 41 at 55. 144. For a sale of goods illustration see Rowland v Divall [1923] 2 KB 500 (see [38-06]). 145. Subject to statute. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1146–9. 146. (1962) 63 SR (NSW) 910. Cf Hodder v Watters [1946] VLR 222. Contrast Rover International Ltd v Cannon Film Sales Ltd [1989] 1 WLR 912.
147. But see [38-36] (requirement of restitutio in integrum). 148. [1939] 1 KB 724 at 743. 149. [1980] 1 WLR 1129 at 1134, 1142, 1148. Cf Baltic Shipping Co v Dillon (The Mikhail Lermontov) (1993) 176 CLR 344 at 352, 390. 150. See [38-31]–[38-33]. 151. Boston Deep Sea Fishing & Ice Co v Ansell (1888) 39 Ch D 339 at 364–5. But see [28-27]. 152. [1898] 1 QB 673. See Ben McFarlane and Robert Stevens, ‘In Defence of Sumpter v Hedges’ (2002) 118 LQR 569. 153. See [28-24]. 154. See also Forman & Co Pty Ltd v The Ship ‘Liddesdale’ [1900] AC 190; Cooper v Australian Electric Co (1922) Ltd (1922) 25 WALR 66. 155. See Pavey & Matthews Pty Ltd v Paul (1987) 162 CLR 221 (see [38-08]). 156. See Steele v Tardiani (1946) 72 CLR 386. 157. But see A S Burrows, ‘Free Acceptance in the Law of Restitution’ (1988) 104 LQR 576. 158. See [38-22]. 159. See [38-14]. 160. (1946) 72 CLR 386. 161. (1946) 72 CLR 386 at 401 per Dixon J. 162. (1946) 72 CLR 386 at 401. 163. See [28-30]–[28-32]. 164. (1946) 72 CLR 386 at 402. 165. (1946) 72 CLR 386 at 402 per Dixon J. Suggestions in Miles v Wakefield MDC [1987] AC 539 at 553, 561, that an employer may be liable as on a quantum meruit for work accepted when the employee intentionally breaches the contract but is not dismissed are not consistent with Australian law. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 909. 166. (1946) 72 CLR 386 at 405 per Dixon J. See also Horton v Jones (No 2) (1939) 39 SR (NSW) 305 at 319–20. 167. See Law Commission, Pecuniary Restitution on Breach of Contract, Law Commission No 121, 1983; Law Reform Committee of South Australia, Nineteenth Report, 1986. However, both suggestions have been criticised. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 1177. But cf C J F Kidd, ‘Partial Performance of Lump Sum Contracts: Proposals for Reform’ (1985) 59 ALJ 96. 168. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 1172–6. 169. See Peter Birks, ‘Restitutionary Damages for Breach of Contract: Snepp and the Fusion of Law and Equity’ [1987] LMCLQ 421; I M Jackman, ‘Restitution for Wrongs’ [1989] CLJ 302; P B H Birks, ‘Civil Wrongs: A New World’ in Butterworth Lectures 1990–91, 1992; Graham Virgo, ‘Restitutionary Remedies for Wrongs: Causation and Remoteness’, in Rickett, ed, Justifying Private Law Remedies, 2008, p 301. Cf Susan Thomas, ‘Proprietary Responses to Voidable Contracts: a Misconceived Analysis’ (2009) 25 JCL 272. 170. Cf Duncan Sheehan, ‘Subtractive and Wrongful Enrichment: Identifying Gain in the Law of
Restitution’, in Rickett, ed, Justifying Private Law Remedies, 2008, p 333. 171. See Winterton Constructions Pty Ltd v Hambros Australia Ltd (1991) 101 ALR 363 at 374; Bryson v Bryant (1992) 29 NSWLR 188 at 222; Commissioner of State Revenue (Vic) v Royal Insurance Australia Ltd (1994) 182 CLR 51 at 73; 126 ALR 1. 172. However, in some cases the benefit to the defendant is also at the plaintiff’s expense in the sense that it was a subtraction from the plaintiff’s assets. 173. Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, ch 15. 174. Birks, An Introduction to the Law of Restitution, 1985, p 322. 175. See [38-02]. 176. See [35-01]. 177. Sometimes termed the ‘remedial’ side of the law. See Birks, Restitution — The Future, 1992, p 1. 178. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 1502. 179. See [38-27]. 180. See [38-28]. 181. See [38-29]. 182. [1941] AC 1. 183. In fact it was never brought to trial and MFG went into liquidation. The appellants put in a proof in the liquidation but at the time of the present action the proof had not been admitted. 184. Cf Stephen Hedley, ‘The Myth of Waiver of Tort’ (1984) 100 LQR 653. 185. For the torts which have been subjected to this analysis see Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, ch 16. 186. Birks, An Introduction to the Law of Restitution, 1985, p 333. 187. See Birks, An Introduction to the Law of Restitution, 1985, pp 339–40 (where the plaintiff could not have made the profit or benefit, it is the ‘non-subtractive receipt’ which is the measure of restitution). 188. See, eg United Dominions Corp Ltd v Brian (1985) 157 CLR 1; 60 ALR 741 (sale of property at a substantial profit). 189. See, eg Boardman v Phipps [1967] 2 AC 46. Cf Snepp v United States 444 US 507 (1980). 190. See generally Hospital Products Ltd v United States Surgical Corp (1984) 156 CLR 41; 55 ALR 417. 191. See, eg Thornley v Tilley (1925) 36 CLR 1. 192. See, eg Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines v Denby [1987] 1 Lloyd’s Rep 367. 193. See, eg [35-12]. 194. See, eg Jonathan Gill, ‘A Man Cannot Serve Two Masters’ (1989) 2 JCL 115 at 139–40. 195. See generally Catherine Mitchell, ‘Remedial Inadequacy in Contract and the Role of Restitutionary Damages’ (1999) 15 JCL 133. 196. (1984) 156 CLR 41 at 124–5. Cf Trident General Insurance Co Ltd v McNiece Bros Pty Ltd (1988) 165 CLR 107 at 146; 80 ALR 574. 197. [1993] 1 WLR 1361. See Peter Birks (1993) 109 LQR 518; Andrew Burrows [1993] LMCLQ 453; Richard O’Dair [1993] RLR 31; S A Smith, ‘Of Remedies and Restrictive Covenants’ (1994) 7 JCL 164. Cf Jaggard v Sawyer [1995] 1 WLR 269 (see [36-26]).
198. See generally R J Sharpe and S M Waddams, ‘Damages for Lost Opportunity to Bargain’ (1982) 2 OJLS 290; S M Waddams, ‘Restitution as Part of Contract Law’ in Burrows, ed, Essays on the Law of Restitution, 1991, p 211; S M Waddams, ‘Profits Derived from Breach of Contract: Damages or Restitution?’ (1997) 11 JCL 115 (and see H O Hunter ‘Commentary on “Profits Derived from Breach of Contract: Damages or Restitution?”’ (1997) 11 JCL 127). 199. See, eg C J Goetz and R E Scott, ‘Enforcing Promises: An Examination of the Basis of Contract’ (1980) 89 Yale LJ 1261. Cf Qi Zhou, ‘Is a Seller’s Efficient Breach of Contract Possible in English Law?’ (2008) 24 JCL 268. The ‘efficient breach’ theory was rejected by the High Court in Tabcorp Holdings Ltd v Bowen Investments Pty Ltd (2009) 236 CLR 272; 253 ALR 1; [2009] HCA 8. 200. See J W Carter and Andrew Stewart, ‘Commerce and Conscience: The High Court’s Developing View of Contract’ (1993) 23 UWALR 49 at 68–9. Cf S M Waddams, ‘The Choice of Remedy for Breach of Contract’ in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995, p 481. 201. [2001] 1 AC 268 at 283. Lords Goff and Browne-Wilkinson agreed. 202. For subsequent English cases on the issue see, eg WWF — World Wide Fund for Nature v World Wrestling Federation Entertainment Inc [2008] 1 WLR 445; [2007] EWCA Civ 286; Devenish Nutrition Ltd v Sanofi-Aventis SA [2009] Ch 390; [2008] EWCA Civ 1086. 203. See [2001] 1 AC 268 at 284. 204. See [2001] 1 AC 268 at 287, 291. Cf Devenish Nutrition Ltd v Sanofi-Aventis SA [2009] Ch 390 at 436; [2008] EWCA Civ 1086 at [4] (concern for coherent remedies). 205. For discussion see Ralph Cunnington, ‘Equitable Damages: A Model for Restitutionary Damages’ (2001) 17 JCL 212; Andrew Phang and Pey-Woan Lee, ‘Rationalising Restitutionary Damages in Contract Law — An Elusive or Illusory Quest?’ (2001) 17 JCL 240; A W B Simpson, ‘A Decision per Incuriam’ (2009) 125 LQR 433; Ralph Cunnington, ‘The Assesment of Gains Based Damages for Breach of Contract’ (2008) 71 MLR 559. 206. See Hospitality Group Pty Ltd v Australian Rugby Union Ltd [2001] 110 FCR 157; Brambles Holdings Ltd v Bathurst City Council (2001) 53 NSWLR 153 at 183; Australian Medic-Care Co Ltd v Hamilton Pharmaceutical Pty Ltd (2009) 261 ALR 501 at 647; [2009] FCA 1220 at [679]. 207. (1987) 162 CLR 221. 208. (1987) 162 CLR 221 at 256. 209. See [38-06]. 210. See [38-14]. 211. See Michael Bryan, ‘Equitable Relief from Forfeiture: Performance or Restitution?’, in Rickett, ed, Justifying Private Law Remedies, 2008, p 363. 212. But the benefit may be of some other form, that is, personal or real property. Cf P C Developments Pty Ltd v Revell (1991) 22 NSWLR 615. See also the discussion in [31-13], which was more concerned with the prevention of unjust enrichment than its reversal. 213. For the recovery of unpaid part payments see [37-39]. 214. (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 478. Rich and McTiernan JJ agreed. See also (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 470. 215. (1931) 31 SR (NSW) 477, approved McDonald v Dennys Lascelles Ltd (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 478 (see also at 470). See also Steedman v Drinkle [1916] 1 AC 275; Berry v Mahony [1933] VLR 314. But cf Mussen v Van Diemen’s Land Co [1938] 1 Ch 253 at 265. 216. (1964) 111 CLR 41. 217. For the subsequent proceedings see Tropical Traders Ltd v Goonan (No 2) [1965] WAR 174.
218. [1954] 1 QB 476. 219. [1954] 1 QB 476 at 490. Somervell LJ said (at 487–8) that the cases do not support the proposition that in no circumstances can a plaintiff be granted relief unless in a position to show, ‘financially’, a readiness and willingness and ability to perform. Contrast the narrow view of Romer LJ. 220. See also O’Dea v Allstates Leasing System (WA) Pty Ltd (1983) 152 CLR 359 at 392; 45 ALR 632. Cf Esanda Finance Corp Ltd v Plessnig (1989) 166 CLR 131 at 151; 84 ALR 99. However, in Legione v Hateley (1983) 152 CLR 406 at 443–4; 46 ALR 1, Mason and Deane JJ left open for future decision whether the majority view in Stockloser should be accepted by the High Court. See also Scandinavian Trading Tanker Co AB v Flota Petrolera Ecuatoriana [1983] 2 AC 694 at 702–3. See further [38-33] (deposit payments). 221. See, eg Masters v Cameron (1954) 91 CLR 353 (a ‘subject to contract’ case (see [5-05])). 222. (1924) 34 CLR 434. See also Christie v Robinson (1907) 4 CLR 1338 (contract cancelled). 223. Summers v The Commonwealth (1918) 25 CLR 144 (affirmed (1919) 26 CLR 180); DTR Nominees Pty Ltd v Mona Homes Pty Ltd (1978) 138 CLR 423; 19 ALR 223. 224. See Ward v Ellerton [1927] VLR 494; Torr v Harpur (1940) 40 SR (NSW) 585; Lombok Pty Ltd v Supetina Pty Ltd (1987) 71 ALR 333. The contrary decision in Landers v Schmidt [1983] 1 Qd R 188 relies on the discredited decision in Hunt v Silk (1804) 5 East 449; 102 ER 1142 (see [38-06]) and is incorrect (see Sibbles v Highfern Pty Ltd (1987) 164 CLR 214 at 232; 76 ALR 13). Cf Marsh v Mackay [1948] St R Qd 113. 225. See [27-27]. 226. Cf Duncan v Mell (1914) 14 SR (NSW) 333. This includes cases where the contract is unenforceable for want of writing. See [9-20]. 227. For the recovery of unpaid deposits see [37-39]. 228. [1964] WAR 2 at 15. 229. Stockloser v Johnson [1954] 1 QB 476 at 491. Cf NLS Pty Ltd v Hughes (1966) 120 CLR 583 at 588– 9. See also Yardley v Saunders [1982] WAR 231 at 237. 230. Coates v Sarich [1964] WAR 2 at 6, 15. Cf Palmer v Temple (1839) 9 Ad & E 508; 112 ER 1304. See also Union Eagle Ltd v Golden Achievement Ltd [1997] AC 514 at 518 (if a deposit is described as ‘liquidated damages’ this does not deprive it of its character as a deposit). 231. Contrast Workers Trust & Merchant Bank Ltd v Dojap Investments Ltd [1993] AC 573 (see Hugh Beale (1993) 109 LQR 524; Charles Harpum [1993] CLJ 389; J W Carter, ‘Two Privy Council Cases’ (1993) 6 JCL 266). 232. [1956] VLR 230. 233. [1954] 1 QB 476 at 490 (see [38-32]). 234. [1957] VR 341. See also the more questionable decision in Coates v Sarich [1964] WAR 2. 235. See [38-04]. 236. (1987) 162 CLR 221 (see [38-08]). 237. See also Property Law Act 1958 (Vic), s 49(2). 238. A A Jones & Son Pty Ltd v Weeden (1964) 82 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 326; Zsadony v Pizer [1955] VLR 496; Romanos v Pentagold Investments Pty Ltd (2003) 217 CLR 367; 201 ALR 399; Aussie Invest Corp Ltd v Pulcesia Pty Ltd (2005) 13 VR 168 at 208–9; [2005] VSC 362 at [322]–[324]. 239. Lucas & Tait (Investments) Pty Ltd v Victoria Securities Ltd [1973] 2 NSWLR 268 at 272; Thors v Weekes (1989) 92 ALR 131 at 145. Cf Frankcombe v Foster Investments Pty Ltd [1978] 2 NSWLR
41 at 54. A narrower view may have been taken in Poort v Development Underwriting (Victoria) Pty Ltd [1976] VR 779 (affirmed [1977] VR 454). 240. See A A Jones & Son Pty Ltd v Weeden (1964) 82 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 326. 241. But exercise of the court’s discretion in the plaintiff’s favour does not absolve the plaintiff from liability in damages for breach of contract and the deposit may be setoff against that liability. See Lucas & Tait (Investments) Pty Ltd v Victoria Securities Ltd [1973] 2 NSWLR 268. 242. See H O Hunter, ‘Measuring the Unjust Enrichment in a Restitution Case’ (1989) 12 Syd LR 76; H O Hunter and J W Carter, ‘Quantum Meruit and Building Contracts — Part II’ (1990) 2 JCL 189. 243. See also [38-18] (goods). 244. See, eg Flett v Deniliquin Publishing Co Ltd [1964–65] NSWR 383 at 386. 245. See, eg Flett v Deniliquin Publishing Co Ltd [1964–65] NSWR 383 at 386; BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 783 at 805 (affirmed [1983] 2 AC 352). An award on a commission basis may be appropriate where this is customary within the industry. See Brenner v First Artists’ Management Pty Ltd [1993] 2 VR 221. 246. Gareth Jones, ‘Restitutionary Claims for Services Rendered’ (1977) 93 LQR 273 at 275. 247. See Van den Berg v Giles [1979] 2 NZLR 111. 248. See [38-37]–[38-39]. 249. See generally Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, ch 14. 250. (1993) 176 CLR 344 (see [36-09], [38-21]). See also [37-39], [38-33] (damages claim against plaintiff granted relief against forfeiture). 251. See, eg Alati v Kruger (1955) 94 CLR 216 (see [18-45]); Vadasz v Pioneer Concrete (SA) Pty Ltd (1995) 184 CLR 102; 130 ALR 570 (see [18-45]) and generally [18-43]–[18-46]. 252. (1924) 34 CLR 160 at 168. 253. See Spence v Crawford [1939] 3 All ER 271 at 288; Akron Securities Ltd v Iliffe (1997) 41 NSWLR 353 at 370; 143 ALR 457. Cf Maguire v Makaronis (1997) 188 CLR 449 at 496–7; 144 ALR 729 at 763–4. See also O’Sullivan v Management Agency and Music Ltd [1985] QB 428 (see [23-02]). 254. See [18-44], [18-45]. See also [20-28], [20-55]; [23-02]; cf [24-27]. 255. See Vadasz v Pioneer Concrete (SA) Pty Ltd (1995) 184 CLR 102 (see [18-45]). 256. See [31-16]. For criticism of this perspective see Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1305, 2329. 257. See, eg Rawson v Hobbs (1961) 107 CLR 466 (see [31-16]); Stern v McArthur (1988) 165 CLR 489 at 509. Cf T M Burke Estates Pty Ltd v P J Constructions (Vic) Pty Ltd [1991] 1 VR 610. 258. (1933) 48 CLR 457 at 478. 259. See also Lexane Pty Ltd v Highfern Pty Ltd [1985] 1 Qd R 446 and [38-32]. 260. See Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, para 1436. 261. BP Exploration Co (Libya) Ltd v Hunt (No 2) [1979] 1 WLR 783 at 805 (affirmed [1983] 2 AC 352). 262. See, eg Ward v Griffiths Bros Ltd (1928) 28 SR (NSW) 425; Way v Latilla [1937] 3 All ER 759; Phillips v Ellinson Bros Pty Ltd (1941) 65 CLR 221 at 246; Stinchcombe v Thomas [1957] VR 509 at 513. 263. (1987) 162 CLR 221.
264. (1987) 162 CLR 221 at 257. He excluded rescinded contracts from this statement. See also Scarisbrick v Parkinson (1869) 20 LT 175; Gareth Jones, ‘Restitution: Unjust Enrichment as a Unifying Element in Australia?’ (1988) 1 JCL 8 at 13. 265. But cf Rover International Ltd v Cannon Film Sales Ltd [1989] 1 WLR 912 (see J Beatson (1989) 105 LQR 179; N H Andrews [1990] CLJ 15). 266. See [38-23]. 267. (1853) 8 Ex 822; 155 ER 1586. 268. [1951] VLR 405 at 409. 269. (1901) 20 NZLR 321. 270. Sub nom Lodder v Slowey [1904] AC 442. 271. 24 P 2d 570 (1933). See Andrew Kull, ‘Restitution as a Remedy for Breach of Contract’ (1994) 67 Southern California Law Review 1465. 272. 24 P 2d 570 at 577 (1933). 273. See [30-04]. 274. (1992) 26 NSWLR 234. Special leave to appeal to the High Court was refused: see (1992) 20 Legal Rep SL 1. 275. See Iezzi Constructions Pty Ltd v Watkins Pacific (Qld) Pty Ltd [1995] 2 Qd R 350; Sopov v Kane Constructions Pty Ltd (No 2) (2009) 24 VR 510; 257 ALR 182; [2009] VSCA 141. 276. For a more detailed analysis see Mason, Carter and Tolhurst, Mason and Carter’s Restitution Law in Australia, 2nd ed, 2008, paras 1428–30. 277. See J W Carter, ‘Restitution and Contract Risk’ in McInnes, ed, Restitution: Developments in Unjust Enrichment, 1996, p 137. 278. See, eg [14-16].
[page 945]
Chapter 39
Specific Performance [39-01] The remedy.1 In J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey2 Dixon J explained that specific performance, ‘in the proper sense, is a remedy to compel the execution in specie of a contract which requires some definite thing to be done before the transaction is complete and the parties’ rights are settled and defined in the manner intended’. He had earlier given an illustration by referring to a contract to transfer ownership of land, where the parties must execute a formal instrument in order to achieve the transfer of legal title to the land. The fact that the defendant is required to execute the contract ‘in specie’ clearly distinguishes the remedy from damages which are, in most cases, awarded in substitution for actual performance. The expression ‘specific performance’ is used in a second sense, as can be implied from Dixon J’s statement. This describes an order applied to a contract which is a ‘final expression’ of the bargain, in the sense that it does ‘not require the parties to adopt a formal instrument’ or do any other preliminary act.3 Specific performance in this sense requires performance of obligations under the contract. In Australian Hardwoods Pty Ltd v Commissioner for Railways4 the Privy Council did not see any reason why specific performance in the second sense should be governed by ‘principles which are in any way different from those applicable to executory agreements “proper”’. However, the distinction is important.5
Some General Points [39-02] Inadequacy of damages. Generally, specific performance is not ordered until a breach of contract has occurred.6 Since there is a remedy in damages,7 it is only if that remedy is inadequate to protect the plaintiff that a court will order specific performance. The basis for ordering specific performance of the contract is therefore the inadequacy of a damages
[page 946] award as a remedy.8 This is the sense in which the expression ‘jurisdiction to order specific performance’ is used. For example, if damages are very difficult to assess, or would not do justice between the parties, the court will say that there is a ‘jurisdiction’ to make the order. Similarly, if there is no contract remedy, for example, because a requirement of writing has not been complied with, part performance of the contract may provide a basis for ordering specific performance.9 Given the general need for an enforceable contract with executory obligations, specific performance is not usually available to a plaintiff if the defendant validly terminated the performance of the contract for breach by the plaintiff. However, relief against forfeiture by an order for specific performance is sometimes (but rarely) made notwithstanding the defendant’s election to terminate.10 [39-03] Contracts to which the remedy is applicable. It should not be thought that specific performance, in either of the two senses referred to above,11 is the usual remedy where a defendant is in breach of contract. There has, however, been a general tendency to enlarge the situations in which the remedy is available.12 For example, in J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey,13 Dixon J explained that specific performance is ‘inapplicable when the continued supervision of the court is necessary in order to ensure the fulfilment of the contract’. However, the better view is that the concept of continued supervision by the court is no longer an effective or useful criterion for the refusal of specific performance.14 Nevertheless, the courts continue to insist, for a variety of reasons, that specific performance is not appropriate in some situations. For example, specific performance of the contract may be impossible, or it may be a futile order because of the defendant’s right to terminate the contractual relationship without notice.15 Again, because of the element of personal service, specific performance is rarely ordered in respect of a contract of employment.16 The courts have generally said that for specific performance to be ordered the whole contract must be the subject of the order.17 Specific [page 947]
performance of part of a severable contract may, however, be ordered if the order relates to a severable part.18 There are also discretionary factors to be considered,19 such as hardship. The ability to refuse relief on the basis of discretion distinguishes equitable relief from common law damages, where the remedy is not subject to the exercise of a judicial discretion in the plaintiff’s favour. One reason why specific performance is now more generally available than in the past is a refusal to draw a sharp distinction between discretionary defences, such as hardship, and factors such as an element of personal service in the contract, which have in the past been treated as going to the ‘jurisdiction’ of the court. In Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd,20 Windeyer J said there is no reason today for ‘limiting by particular categories, rather than by general principle, the cases in which orders for specific performance will be made’. However, it is appropriate in a book of this nature to consider the remedy in the context of specific types of contracts.
Specific Contracts [39-04] Sale of land. Specific performance has its main application to contracts for the sale of land or an interest in land. Thus, if the defendant has agreed to convey title to a particular parcel of land, but refuses to complete the transaction, the plaintiff will usually be entitled to specific performance. This will include an order that the defendant execute such documentation as is necessary to enable the plaintiff to become registered as the owner of the land at the land titles office. The reason that the remedy has its main application to land contracts is historical. Specific performance has been granted on the basis that land is unique, that is, that the purchaser cannot go into the market and buy an equivalent parcel. Damages sufficient to purchase a replacement are therefore not an adequate remedy. In addition, the fact that a binding contract exists between the parties means that the purchaser possesses an equitable interest in the land.21 This is an illustration of what the Privy Council described in Palmer v Carey22 as the ‘familiar doctrine of equity that a contract for valuable consideration to transfer or charge a specific subject matter passes a beneficial interest by way of property in that subject matter’. The proprietary interest is coextensive with the purchaser’s ability to claim specific performance.23 Specific performance may therefore be ordered even though the purchaser is a
developer, purchasing with a view to profit.24 Although in such a case it may be difficult to justify saying that the land is unique, damages are still regarded as inadequate. [page 948] [39-05] Sale of goods. Specific performance of a contract for the sale of goods is the exception rather than the rule. That is because damages will almost invariably be an adequate remedy for the plaintiff. The position is perhaps clearest where the contract relates to a commodity available on the market. For example, if A agrees to sell 100 tonnes of a particular grade of wheat to B, breach by A can be adequately compensated by an award of damages because B can buy the same quantity from a different seller. However, the sale of goods legislation does not rule out the possibility of specific performance. Section 56 of the Sale of Goods Act 1923 (NSW) states that nothing in the Act affects ‘any remedy in equity of the buyer or seller in respect of any breach of a contract of sale’. This includes the remedy of specific performance. Section 58 of the Goods Act 1958 (Vic)25 is more explicit. It provides: In any action for breach of contract to deliver specific or ascertained goods the court may if it thinks fit on the application of the plaintiff by its judgment direct that the contract shall be performed specifically without giving the defendant the option of retaining the goods on payment of damages. The judgment may be unconditional or upon such terms and conditions as to damages payment of the price and otherwise as to the court may seem just, and the application by the plaintiff may be made at any time before judgment.
The words which restrict the operation of this provision to ‘specific or ascertained’ goods exclude the commodity contract example referred to above. Such a contract relates to unascertained goods. Therefore, unless the seller has appropriated a particular parcel of wheat to the contract and the buyer has consented to the appropriation — so that the goods have become ‘ascertained’ — specific performance is not available. Specific performance is frequently refused because the goods in question, even though specific or ascertained, have no special value or interest.26 That has sometimes been done on the ground that there is no jurisdiction in respect of ordinary articles of commerce.27 However, the better view is that expressed by Jacobs J in Aristoc Industries Pty Ltd v R A Wenham (Builders) Pty Ltd,28 namely, that the rarity of the chattel in question is one aspect of the general
question of inadequacy of damages. Accordingly, if ‘damages at law are an inadequate remedy then there is no principle which [page 949] will prevent the interference of the court of equity simply because the subject matter is a chattel’.29 Dougan v Ley30 is an illustration. The defendant agreed to sell a licensed taxicab registered under the Transport Act 1930 (NSW) to the plaintiffs for the sum of £1850. The evidence established not only that the number of licensed taxicabs was limited, but also that the number of such vehicles which could be sold was even less because of a statutory restriction on transfer of registration. Roper J’s order for specific performance31 was affirmed by the High Court. Dixon J said that the contract was not, in substance, a simple sale of goods. In fact, the contract was ‘for the transfer of a valuable privilege annexed to a chattel’.32 He pointed out that the greater part of the price which the plaintiffs had agreed to pay was represented by the registration and licence. [39-06] Contracts to pay money. The fact that a contract obliges the plaintiff (or defendant) to pay money does not necessarily preclude the court making an order for specific performance. For example, the remedy is available to a vendor under a contract for the sale of land even if all that remains for performance is the purchaser’s obligation to pay money.33 Outside the sale of land context there has been a certain reluctance to order specific performance in such cases. This can be justified on the basis that there is an adequate remedy under the common law, namely, to recover the sum which the defendant agreed to pay, as a debt due or as damages.34 If the remedy at common law is not adequate, there is at least a basis for arguing that specific performance should be available to the plaintiff. For example, the House of Lords found no difficulty in ordering specific performance in Beswick v Beswick.35 Peter Beswick (A) assigned his coal merchant’s business to John Beswick (B) in return, among other things, for a promise by B to pay a weekly sum of £5 to A’s wife (C). C was not a party to the contract of sale. After A’s death B repudiated his obligations and C successfully claimed specific performance in her capacity as A’s legal personal representative. It was assumed that on the facts A would have been entitled to nominal damages, but no more, because C (not A) was the person who would suffer loss on B’s
breach. Accordingly, damages would not have been an adequate remedy for B’s breach. Moreover, multiple actions in debt or damages would have been necessary, but were avoided by the order for specific performance. Lord Pearce, who rejected the assumption that damages would have been nominal, considered that specific performance could be justified on the ground that it was the more appropriate remedy. In Beswick it was, of course, purely fortuitous that C was A’s legal personal representative. Had some other person occupied that [page 950] position they might not have brought the claim. But that is irrelevant to the conclusion. Thus, in Coulls v Bagot’s Executor and Trustee Co Ltd36 Barwick CJ and Windeyer J, in separate judgments, expressed the view that if B promises A, for consideration supplied by A, to pay money to C, then A may obtain specific performance if B defaults. Beswick v Beswick illustrates that where the plaintiff has fully performed his or her contractual obligations the court will be more willing to order specific performance. The object is to ensure that the plaintiff receives the defendant’s performance rather than an inadequate damages award. From a wider perspective the decision suggests that specific performance should be ordered unless there are good reasons for not doing so.37
Discretionary Factors [39-07] Readiness and willingness of plaintiff. There is no doubt that the readiness and willingness of the plaintiff to perform the contract, or the existence of a breach on the plaintiff’s part, is relevant to the court’s decision whether to exercise its discretion in the plaintiff’s favour.38 However, the Privy Council adopted too rigid a stance39 in Australian Hardwoods Pty Ltd v Commissioner for Railways.40 The Privy Council said that the plaintiff must fail if in breach of a term in a contract containing dependent obligations, or not ready and willing to perform where the contract states continuing or future acts to be performed by the plaintiff. As was explained earlier,41 a plaintiff in breach of a time stipulation is not necessarily precluded from obtaining specific performance by reason of the breach, because of the statutory rule applicable to such terms. Some inquiry must be made into the seriousness of the breach42 and the extent of any absence
of readiness or willingness. The same is true of other types of terms.43 Thus, generally, if the plaintiff’s breach formed the basis for a valid termination by the defendant equitable relief will not be given.44 The Australian Hardwoods case illustrates this as the defendants had there exercised a right to terminate. But to say that a prior breach is necessarily [page 951] fatal would deny that the court has any discretion to exercise, and that is inconsistent with the authorities. Of course, the plaintiff must be ready, willing and able to comply with the order for specific performance. For example, in Mehmet v Benson45 the plaintiff brought an action for the specific performance of a sale of land contract which required the plaintiff to make instalment payments of the price on specified dates. Although the plaintiff defaulted, the defendant did not immediately exercise his contractual right to terminate for breach. In fact, before the defendant purported to terminate he accepted money on account of the price of the land and this was held to make the election of the defendant ineffective. Because there was no right to terminate, the court held that the plaintiff’s breach did not disentitle him to an order for specific performance. So far as the readiness and willingness of the plaintiff to perform was concerned, Barwick CJ said:46 The question as to whether or not the plaintiff has been and is ready and willing to perform the contract is one of substance not to be resolved in any technical or narrow sense. It is important to bear in mind what is the substantial thing for which the parties contract and what on the part of the plaintiff in a suit for specific performance are his essential obligations.
On the facts the defendant would receive the price by virtue of the order for specific performance and the ancillary orders compensated him for loss or damage occasioned by the plaintiff’s delay. Accordingly, the court exercised its discretion in the plaintiff’s favour. [39-08] Mutuality. The question of mutuality of remedy has been the subject of disagreement among text writers.47 Two questions may arise: (1) whether the defendant could have obtained specific performance against the plaintiff; and (2) whether the defendant has a remedy on the contract which can be enforced against the plaintiff if specific performance is ordered.
It would be wrong to refuse a plaintiff specific performance just because, had the defendant petitioned for that relief, it would have been refused as a matter of discretion. On the other hand, the court must not leave the defendant without adequate compensation in respect of any breach on the plaintiff’s part. It would therefore be unfair to order specific performance in favour of a plaintiff if the order would not secure performance by the plaintiff.48 Assuming that mutuality becomes relevant to the proceedings a further question may arise, namely, whether mutuality must be present both at the time of the proceedings and at the time the contract was entered into. The better view is that mutuality at the time of suit is sufficient. Thus, in [page 952] Dougan v Ley49 Williams J said that mutuality was not lacking at the time the contract was entered into. However, ‘even if it had been, the better opinion would appear to be that a contract is capable of being specifically performed if, notwithstanding that it was not mutually enforceable at that time, it has become mutually enforceable at the date the suit is instituted’. When the law was considered by the English Court of Appeal in Price v Strange,50 the same conclusion was reached. The plaintiff there sought specific performance of an oral agreement for an underlease which the plaintiff conceded would not originally have been amenable to the remedy of specific performance.51 The plaintiff’s obligation was to carry out repair work on the building the subject of the head lease. However, by the time the proceedings were commenced the work had been done (by the defendant) and mutuality was not lacking. The terms of the court’s order protected the defendant by requiring the plaintiff to make proper compensation for the work done, on the basis of the actual cost to the defendant. The court also emphasised that lack of mutuality goes to the court’s discretion, and is not necessarily fatal to the plaintiff’s claim. It therefore appears that the crucial time for considering whether mutuality is present is the time of the court’s order. If mutuality is lacking at that time, the court may refuse relief, even if mutuality was present at the time of the contract or the institution of proceedings.52 However, the defendant may ‘waive’ the want of mutuality. For example, where specific performance would not be ordered against a purchaser under a contract for the sale of land because of a defect in the vendor’s title, the purchaser may claim specific performance by electing not to
rely on the want of mutuality.53 [39-09] Delay. Delay on the plaintiff’s part in pursuing a right or remedy is always relevant, and that is true whether the right or remedy is legal or equitable in nature. Principles of election between inconsistent rights or remedies clearly illustrate that point.54 But the principles governing delay in equity have an independent existence. For example, where an equitable right of rescission arises out of lack of mutuality of remedy under a contract for the sale of land, the purchaser must act promptly in order to avoid a suit for specific performance by the vendor.55 More generally, in considering a plaintiff’s delay in the context of specific performance, the discretion of the court is exercised according to whether it amounts to ‘laches’.56 In Fitzgerald v Masters57 an action for specific [page 953] performance of a contract for the sale of land was commenced more than 26 years after the execution of the contract document. That delay was held by a majority of the court to disentitle the plaintiff.58 However, the discussion by the court, and particularly the joint judgment of Dixon CJ and Fullagar J (who dissented) indicates that it is not length of time per se which disentitles a plaintiff. Rather, the court must consider whether, having regard to the delay, it is in the circumstances fair and just to order specific performance.59 This involves a consideration of whether the defendant can be adequately compensated, as part of the order for specific performance, in respect of any disadvantage caused by the plaintiff’s delay. Therefore, apart from considering the length of time, it will be necessary to ask what has actually been done in the period relied upon as constituting laches. It must be determined whether an element of injustice is present which would not have been present had the proceedings been brought punctually.60 [39-10] Hardship or unfairness. The existence of conduct on the part of the plaintiff which renders it unfair for specific performance to be granted in his or her favour is relevant to the exercise of the court’s discretion. So also is the presence of hardship to the defendant.61 It would seem that the matter ‘falls to be answered as at the time when the decree would otherwise be made’,62 rather than the time of entry into the contract.
Of course, the mere fact that the contract has turned sour for the defendant is not a basis for refusing specific performance. There must be genuine hardship not just an unprofitable or hard bargain.63 [39-11] Mistake. The ability of a party to rescind a contract on the ground of mistake was discussed earlier.64 Clearly, if the contract has been validly rescinded for mistake (or was void) no claim for specific performance will lie. Equally, even if there is no rescission, a court may refuse to order specific performance if there is an element of mistake in relation to the contract. In Tamplin v James65 Baggallay LJ said:66 It is doubtless well established that a court of equity will refuse specific performance of an agreement when the defendant has entered into it under a mistake, and where injustice would be done to him were performance to be enforced. The most common instances of such refusal on the ground of
[page 954] mistake are cases in which there has been some unintentional misrepresentation on the part of the plaintiff … or where from the ambiguity of the agreement different meanings have been given to it by the different parties.
A court may exercise its discretion in the defendant’s favour irrespective of whether the mistake was common,67 mutual68 or unilateral.69 Therefore, classification of the mistake is not crucial. However, provided specific performance would not cause undue hardship to the defendant, the court will generally order specific performance if the plaintiff did not contribute to the defendant’s mistake.70 Thus, Baggallay LJ said in Tamplin v James:71 But where there has been no misrepresentation, and where there is no ambiguity in the terms of the contract, the defendant cannot be allowed to evade the performance of it by the simple statement that he has made a mistake. Were such to be the law the performance of a contract could rarely be enforced upon an unwilling party who was also unscrupulous.
Tamplin v James involved a vendor’s action for specific performance. The purchaser resisted on the ground of his mistake as to the identity of the subject matter of the contract. The description and plans of the property being auctioned were unambiguous. Although the purchaser, when bidding, had mistakenly believed that ‘The Ship Inn’ being auctioned included two pieces of garden ground at the rear of the premises, he was ordered to perform. The case shows that subjective mistake must be accompanied by something else, such as disentitling conduct by the unmistaken party, or the objective circumstances of the case.72
Cases where specific performance has been refused even though the defendant’s mistake was not known to the plaintiff are commonly cases where specific performance would, in view of the mistake, involve hardship amounting to injustice.73 Where the defendant’s mistake relates to the meaning of the contract the position was explained by O’Connor J in Goldsbrough Mort & Co Ltd v Quinn.74 The court ‘must be clearly convinced that the party resisting specific performance was in fact mistaken as to the meaning of the contract by which he bound himself’. For example, a clear case of ambiguity in relation to a material term of the contract might be sufficient. The mistake alleged in the Goldsbrough Mort case was that the defendant was bound by a contract which required him to sell his land for less than half of that for which he intended to part with it. [page 955] The court said that this mistake would have been a sufficient ground for the exercise of its discretion in the defendant’s favour. But on the facts the defendant could not make out his allegation. [39-12] Misrepresentation.75 As in the case of mistake, rescission for misleading or deceptive conduct (misrepresentation)76 will prevent specific performance being ordered. But, in the context of the court’s discretion to refuse specific performance to a plaintiff who has otherwise made out a case for relief, a defendant with no right of rescission may nevertheless be in a position to convince the court that specific performance should not be ordered. It is a question, for the court, of doing justice between the parties, and the existence of the misrepresentation is a material factor against the plaintiff. 1.
See generally on specific performance Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, Chapter 20.
2.
(1931) 45 CLR 282 at 297. Cf McMahon v Ambrose [1987] VR 817 at 826.
3.
J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey (1931) 45 CLR 282 at 297.
4.
[1961] 1 WLR 425 at 434.
5.
See Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, para 20-015.
6.
But the order for specific performance will, if necessary, be postponed in its operation to the time of performance under the contract: see Hasham v Zenab [1960] AC 316.
7.
See generally Chapters 35 and 36.
8.
Hewett v Court (1983) 149 CLR 639 at 665; 46 ALR 87; Co-operative Insurance Society Ltd v Argyll Stores (Holdings) Ltd [1998] AC 1 at 11-12, 14 (see Andrew Phang (1998) 61 MLR 421).
9.
See [9-21]–[9-24]. But there is no general principle that specific performance can be obtained in respect of unenforceable contracts.
10.
See [31-13]–[31-14].
11.
See [39-01].
12.
See further [39-06].
13.
(1931) 45 CLR 282 at 297-8.
14.
See Patrick Stevedores Operations No 2 Pty Ltd v Maritime Union of Australia (1998) 195 CLR 1; 153 ALR 643 (approving Co-operative Insurance Society Ltd v Argyll Stores (Holdings) Ltd [1998] AC 1).
15.
See, eg Heppingstone v Stewart (1910) 12 CLR 126 at 129, 138.
16.
See Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 428; 131 ALR 422 at 432 per Brennan CJ, Dawson and Toohey JJ (‘save in exceptional circumstances’). See also Visscher v Giudice (2009) 239 CLR 361 at 380; 258 ALR 651; [2009] HCA 34 at [54] and further [40-08].
17.
See, eg J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey (1931) 45 CLR 282 at 314.
18.
Wilkinson v Clements (1872) LR 8 Ch App 96. See also J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey (1931) 45 CLR 282 at 294.
19.
See generally [39-07]–[39-12].
20.
(1967) 119 CLR 460 at 503. See also McMahon v Ambrose [1987] VR 817 at 837 and S M Waddams, ‘The Choice of Remedy for Breach of Contract’ in Beatson and Friedmann, eds, Good Faith and Fault in Contract Law, 1995, p 471.
21.
See, eg Legione v Hateley (1983) 152 CLR 406; 46 ALR 1.
22.
(1926) 37 CLR 545 at 548.
23.
See Stern v McArthur (1988) 165 CLR 489; 81 ALR 463. This includes enforcement by injunction: Chan v Cresdon Pty Ltd (1989) 168 CLR 242 at 253; 89 ALR 522. But see Tanwar Enterprises Pty Ltd v Cauchi (2003) 217 CLR 315 at 332-5; 201 ALR 359 at 371-3 and cf R P Meagher, ‘Sir Frederick Jordan’s Footnote’ (1999) 15 JCL 1.
24.
See, eg Pianta v National Finance & Trustees Ltd (1964) 180 CLR 146. And note the difference of opinion in Loan Investment Corp of Australasia v Bonner [1970] NZLR 724.
25.
See also ACT: Sale of Goods Act 1954, s 55; NT: Sale of Goods Act 1972, s 56; Qld: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 53; SA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 51; Tas: Sale of Goods Act 1896, s 56; WA: Sale of Goods Act 1895, s 51.
26.
See, eg Cohen v Roche [1927] 1 KB 169 at 181.
27.
See Cook v Rodgers (1946) 46 SR (NSW) 229.
28.
[1965] NSWR 581. Cf Eximenco Handels AG v Partrederiet Oro Chief (The Oro Chief) [1983] 2 Lloyd’s Rep 509.
29.
[1965] NSWR 581 at 588.
30.
(1946) 71 CLR 142. See also ANZ Executors & Trustees Ltd v Humes Ltd [1990] VR 615 (shares not available on the market).
31.
Sub nom Ley v Dougan (1945) 63 WN (NSW) 224.
32.
See (1946) 71 CLR 142 at 149.
33.
Turner v Bladin (1951) 82 CLR 463.
34.
See Wight v Haberdan Pty Ltd [1984] 2 NSWLR 280 at 289. But see [36-07].
35.
[1968] AC 58 (see [16-12]). See also Dome Resources NL v Silver (2008) 72 NSWLR 693 at 708; [2008] NSWCA 322 at [54].
36.
(1967) 119 CLR 460 at 478, 503.
37.
Cf Wight v Haberdan Pty Ltd [1984] 2 NSWLR 280.
38.
For the meaning of readiness and willingness see [30-29]. In King v Poggioli (1923) 32 CLR 222 the High Court treated an absence of readiness or willingness as conclusive against the plaintiff; but that may, perhaps, be explained on the ground that the plaintiff was not ready and willing at the time of the lower court’s order for specific performance.
39.
See Bahr v Nicolay (No 2) (1988) 164 CLR 604 at 620; 78 ALR 1.
40.
[1961] 1 WLR 425 at 432-3. For the distinction between dependent and independent obligations see [28-05]–[28-08].
41.
See [29-12].
42.
See, eg Ray v Davies (1909) 9 CLR 160; Bahr v Nicolay (No 2) (1988) 164 CLR 604 at 619.
43.
The words or conduct of the defendant may be relevant to the readiness and willingness of the plaintiff; see generally [30-47] and, in the context of specific performance, eg Carpentaria Investments Pty Ltd v Airs [1972] Qd R 436. On pleading readiness and willingness see Tsangaris v Gaymark Investments Pty Ltd (1986) 82 FLR 269 at 285 and [28-11].
44.
Subject to the possibility of relief against forfeiture; see [31-13].
45.
(1965) 113 CLR 295. See also Bahr v Nicolay (No 2) (1988) 164 CLR 604 at 621, 640-1, 658-9; Darter Pty Ltd v Malloy [1993] 2 Qd R 615 at 621. Cf Thors v Weekes (1989) 92 ALR 131 at 144.
46.
(1965) 113 CLR 295 at 307. See also Fullers’ Theatres Ltd v Musgrove (1923) 31 CLR 524 at 550.
47.
See Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, para 20-150.
48.
See J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey (1931) 45 CLR 282 at 298.
49.
(1946) 71 CLR 142 at 154. See also Macaulay v Greater Paramount Theatres Ltd (1921) 22 SR (NSW) 66; McMahon v Ambrose [1987] VR 817 at 849.
50.
[1978] Ch 337.
51.
Cf Greetings Oxford Koala Hotel Pty Ltd v Oxford Square Investments Pty Ltd (1989) 18 NSWLR 33.
52.
See E Johnson & Co (Barbados) Ltd v NSR Ltd [1997] AC 400. See Meagher, Hey-don and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, para 20-155.
53.
Halkett v Earl of Dudley [1907] 1 Ch 590.
54.
See [18-50], [31-05]–[31-07].
55.
Halkett v Earl of Dudley [1907] 1 Ch 590. The right of rescission is conferred by NSW: Conveyancing Act 1919, s 55; NT: Law of Property Act 2001, s 71(1); Qld: Property Law Act 1974, s 69.
56.
For the relationship between laches, estoppel and acquiescence see Orr v Ford (1989) 167 CLR 316 at 339ff; 84 ALR 146.
57.
(1956) 95 CLR 420.
58.
But when regard was had to moratorium legislation, there was no delay of which the defendant could take advantage and so specific performance was ordered.
59.
See, eg Baxton v Kara [1982] 1 NSWLR 604.
60.
See Carter v Hyde (1923) 33 CLR 115 at 127.
61.
For an illustration of hardship see Norton v Angus (1926) 38 CLR 523 (see [3626]). Cf Demagogue Pty Ltd v Ramensky (1992) 110 ALR 608 at 622 (impact of misleading or deceptive conduct).
62.
Hewett v Court (1983) 149 CLR 639 at 664. And see Patel v Ali [1984] Ch 283.
63.
Cf ANZ Executors & Trustees Ltd v Humes Ltd [1990] VR 615.
64.
See Chapter 20.
65.
(1880) 15 Ch D 215.
66.
(1880) 15 Ch D 215 at 217.
67.
See, eg Dell v Beasley [1959] NZLR 89. And cf Jones v Clifford (1876) 3 Ch D 779. Contrast Jefferys v Fairs (1876) 4 Ch D 448.
68.
See [20-37].
69.
See, eg Cochrane v Willis (1865) 1 Ch App 58; Jericho v Guglielmin [1938] SASR 292.
70.
Slee v Warke (1949) 86 CLR 271. See also Fragomeni v Fogliani (1968) 42 ALJR 263.
71.
(1880) 15 Ch D 215 at 217-18.
72.
Contrast Denny v Hancock (1870) LR 6 Ch App 1, where the purchaser succeeded because the plan supplied by the vendors coupled with the physical characteristics of the land had been misleading and had in fact misled the purchaser. See also Harkins v Butcher (2002) 55 NSWLR 558 at 572.
73.
See Goldsbrough Mort & Co Ltd v Quinn (1910) 10 CLR 674; Gall v Mitchell (1924) 35 CLR 222; Jericho v Guglielmin [1938] SASR 292; Slee v Warke (1949) 86 CLR 271; Fragomeni v Fogliani (1968) 42 ALJR 263.
74.
(1910) 10 CLR 674 at 687.
75.
See generally Spry, Equitable Remedies, 7th ed, 2007, pp 161-73.
76.
See generally Chapter 18.
[page 956]
Chapter 40
Injunction [40-01] The remedy.1 Like the remedy of specific performance, the remedy of injunction is equitable in origin. In the context of contractual disputes it is concerned with securing contractual performance in specie. It is, as Dixon J explained in J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey,2 ‘a remedy appropriate to restrain the violation of a provision or term of a contract which is the final expression of the parties’ legal relations’. [40-02] Types of injunctions. Injunctions may be classified in various ways.3 For example, if the injunction is designed to prevent the breach of a negative term of a contract it is ‘prohibitory’ in character, whereas if it is designed to compel performance of a term it is ‘mandatory’ in character. Another classification is by reference to time. If granted prior to a breach of contract it is ‘quia timet’ and distinguishable from an injunction designed to prevent repetition of a breach. If the injunction is intended to last for a limited time it is ‘interlocutory’, otherwise the injunction is ‘final’. A third classification is based on whether the defendant in the action has been served with the plaintiff’s initiating process. If the defendant has been served the injunction is granted ‘inter partes’, if not it is ‘ex parte’. Recent developments have given rise to further refinements, for example, in the appearance of the so-called ‘Mareva injunction’.4 This chapter is primarily concerned with the considerations relevant to a claim for an injunction to prevent the breach of a negative term of a contract. [40-03] Injunction to restrain a breach of contract. An injunction may be granted (issued) to restrain a breach of contract which the defendant has threatened to commit, or the continuance or repetition of a breach already committed. A convenient starting point is the famous statement of Lord Cairns LC in Doherty v Allman:5
[I]f there had been a negative covenant, I apprehend, according to well-settled practice, a court of equity would have had no discretion to exercise. If
[page 957] parties, for valuable consideration, with their eyes open, contract that a particular thing shall not be done, all that a court of equity has to do is to say, by way of injunction, that which the parties have already said by way of covenant, that the thing shall not be done; and in such case the injunction does nothing more than give the sanction of the process of the court to that which already is the contract between the parties. It is not then a question of the balance of convenience or inconvenience, or of the amount of damage or of injury — it is the specific performance, by the court, of that negative bargain which the parties have made, with their eyes open, between themselves. But … if there be not a negative covenant but only an affirmative covenant, it appears to me that the case admits of a very different construction. I entirely admit that an affirmative covenant may be of such a character that a court of equity, although it cannot enforce affirmatively the performance of the covenant, may, in special cases, interpose to prevent that being done which would be a departure from, and a violation of, the covenant. That is a well-settled and well-known jurisdiction of the court of equity. But in that case … there appear to me to come in considerations which do not occur in the case of a negative covenant. It may be that a court of equity will see that, by interposing in a case of that kind, in place of leaving the parties to their remedy in damages, it would be doing more harm than it could possibly do good, and there are, as we well know, different matters which the court of equity will, under those circumstances, take into its view.
The present relevance of Lord Cairns’ statement does not lie in its accuracy, for in fact in some respects it is now regarded as inaccurate.6 Rather it highlights the pertinent issues, and provides a framework for discussion of those issues. [40-04] Relevance of discretion. Lord Cairns’ statement in Doherty v Allman7 draws a distinction between negative and positive covenants or terms.8 It suggests that in the former there is no discretion for the court to exercise. However, as Mason J said in Dalgety Wine Estates Pty Ltd v Rizzon,9 there is ‘general agreement’ that the statement is ‘not accurate’. As we have seen,10 in an action for specific performance the first question is whether damages would be an inadequate remedy. But in the context of a claim for an injunction inadequacy of damages is simply a factor relevant to the justice of the case.11 In addition, discretionary factors do not figure quite so prominently where an injunction is sought to restrain the breach of a negative term. But there is no reason for saying that discretion is never relevant to a negative term but always relevant to other types of terms.12 For example, the grant of an injunction to restrain the breach of a negative restraint clause is subject to a discretion to refuse to enforce the restraint.13
[page 958] The true position is that the court will not grant an injunction where it would, in the circumstances of the case, be ‘inequitable’14 to do so. [40-05] Position where specific performance not available. Lord Cairns in Doherty v Allman15 describes the grant of an injunction as the specific performance of a ‘negative bargain’. However, it is clear that an injunction may be obtained even though specific performance of the whole contract is not asked for, or available to the plaintiff. Therefore the rule16 against specific performance of part of a contract is not infringed. In truth, an injunction to enforce a negative stipulation is at most specific performance in the second of the two senses described earlier.17 In many cases where specific performance has been refused injunctive relief has also been refused, on the basis that the unavailability of specific performance implies that no injunction should issue to restrain the defendant’s breach. But these are cases in which the injunction would have the same effect as specific performance. Thus, in J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey18 the defendants, lessees of a theatre, granted the plaintiffs the exclusive right to sell sweets and confectionery in the theatre but later repudiated their obligations and granted the right to a third party. The plaintiffs’ claim for specific performance was rejected because the contract was not of a type which the court would enforce by that remedy. There would, for example, have been a need for constant supervision by the court. The plaintiffs’ claim, to enforce their right to sell sweets and confectionery by means of an injunction restraining the defendants from granting the right to the third party, was also refused, because it was equivalent to specific performance of the whole contract. Dixon J said19 it was not possible to order specific performance where the plaintiffs’ breach would sound only in damages. He also said that the reason for not ordering specific performance ‘ought not to be forgotten’ when the injunction was considered. The defendants would have been compelled to perform their side of the bargain in specie even though their obligation to perform depended on future performance by the plaintiffs. At best the defendants would have had a remedy in damages. [40-06] Adequacy of damages. Is it true to say, as Lord Cairns did in Doherty v Allman,20 that the adequacy of the plaintiff’s remedy in damages is not relevant to the decision to grant an injunction to restrain a breach of contract? In Sanderson Motors (Sales) Pty Ltd v Yorkstar Motors Pty Ltd21 the plaintiffs
sought an injunction to restrain the defendants from terminating a distributorship agreement without cause except in accordance with a contractual provision dealing with termination. In granting the injunction, [page 959] Yeldham J considered the question formulated by Sachs LJ in Evans Marshall & Co Ltd v Bertola SA22 a proper expression of the relevance of damages. In that case Sachs LJ asked ‘is it just, in all the circumstances, that a plaintiff should be confined to his remedy in damages?’ In Evans Marshall, which also concerned an agency and distribution agreement, the injunction was granted. Similarly, in Sanderson Motors Yeldham J considered it would not be just to confine the plaintiff to his remedy in damages. Accordingly, in the context of injunction, inadequacy of damages is not so much a basis for jurisdiction as a factor relevant to the justice of the case. [40-07] Negative and positive duties. Lord Cairns in Doherty v Allman23 treated the form of the term sought to be enforced by injunction, that is, whether it is positive or negative, as crucial. An ‘affirmative’ term, Lord Cairns said, is enforceable only in ‘special cases’ and even then subject to a discretion which does not otherwise apply. It is now accepted that it is the substance of the term which matters, not its form.24 But the need for a negative term is ‘fundamental’.25 Nevertheless, as Mason J said in Dalgety Wine Estates Pty Ltd v Rizzon26 it is not entirely clear how Lord Cairns’ statement should be reformed. That is because it is ‘quite impossible to formulate an illuminating statement of principle which is capable of universal application’. Mason J went on to explain that the: attitudes of the courts to the enforcement of negative stipulations have varied according to the nature of the stipulation, the nature of the contract in which it is found, the effect which enforcement will have on the relationship of the parties under the contract and the character of the order required to enforce the stipulation.
In order to decide whether the substance of the term in question is negative in character the court will ask whether mere inactivity on the part of the defendant constitutes performance of the term. For example, in Administrative and Clerical Officers Association v The Commonwealth27 the plaintiffs sought an injunction to restrain the Commonwealth from ceasing its practice of deducting union dues
of the plaintiffs’ members from the salary, paid by the Commonwealth, except on giving notice. It was assumed that the practice was part of a legally binding contract between the plaintiffs and the Commonwealth. Mason J found the substance of the terms relied on to be positive, not negative. This was because inactivity on the part of the Commonwealth would involve a failure to deduct dues from salary and therefore not constitute performance of the term, which required the deduction to be made and to be paid to the plaintiffs. On the other hand, a promise to grant an exclusive licence to the plaintiff naturally implies a negative, that is, not to grant a licence to someone else. That implied term [page 960] is performed by mere inactivity on the defendant’s part. For example, an injunction may be granted to restrain the breach of a positive restraint clause, such as a defendant’s promise to obtain supplies exclusively from the plaintiff.28 A positive term may, however, sometimes be enforced by a mandatory injunction, that is, one which requires the performance of a contractual obligation. For example, in Burns Philp Trust Co Pty Ltd v Kwikasair Freightlines Ltd29 the plaintiffs sought an injunction to restrain the defendants from preventing their inspection of a register pursuant to a deed of trust between the parties. One term of the trust deed conferred a right to inspect. The Full Court of the Supreme Court of New South Wales held that the plaintiffs were entitled to the injunction sought. The court admitted that the term was primarily affirmative, rather than negative in its nature. However, it found that an insufficient reason for refusing the relief claimed. In effect, the court was ordering specific performance of part of the deed, but the term was not of a type to which equity would deny enforcement, by reason of the need for continuous supervision or otherwise. Moreover, damages were not an adequate remedy for the plaintiffs, and the court was not enforcing the principal or substantial part of the deed which would not, as a whole, have been properly the subject of the remedy of specific performance. Nevertheless, a positive term will not be enforced by an injunction if this would amount to specific performance in a context where the court would refuse that remedy. [40-08] Employment contracts. In Lumley v Wagner30 the plaintiff sought an injunction to restrain the defendant from singing at Covent Garden in breach of a contract which bound her to sing at Her Majesty’s Theatre, London, for a period
of three months. The contract contained a term which stated that the defendant would not ‘use her talents at any other theatre, nor in any concert or reunion, public or private, without the written authorisation’ of the plaintiff. Lord St Leonards’ decision to grant the injunction has given rise to considerable controversy31 and led to many subsequent decisions. It is difficult, if not impossible, to reconcile all those decisions. To a large extent the problem arises because Lumley v Wagner itself sits uneasily with equitable principles governing the issue of injunctions. It might be argued that the court was seized of jurisdiction in Lumley v Wagner because of the existence of the negative term and therefore had no option but to issue the injunction. Although that would be in accordance with Lord Cairns’ statement of the law in Doherty v Allman,32 it ignores the point that the court will not grant an injunction which is, in effect, specific [page 961] performance of the contract because an employment contract is not specifically enforceable. In other words, the court should not grant an injunction which requires the defendant to choose between working for the plaintiff and not working at all. In Lumley v Wagner the order was not equivalent to specific performance, but it arguably placed the defendant in the position where she could either work for the plaintiff or not sing at all in England. Lord St Leonards denied that he had the power to compel the defendant to sing for the plaintiff. Although the injunction looks to have been strongly coercive in that regard (because she was hardly likely to remain idle or obtain some other form of employment in England) there was nothing to prevent her singing in Europe.33 The decision can be contrasted with Heine Bros (Aust) Pty Ltd v Forrest34 where the plaintiffs sought to restrain the defendant, an employee subject to a three-year contract of employment, from breaching the contract. Clause 4 required the defendant to serve the plaintiffs and to ‘devote his whole time and attention during usual business hours’ to his duties under the contract. It went on to state that the defendant should ‘not be concerned in any other business’ than that of the plaintiffs: either directly or indirectly, for or on behalf of any other person, firm or company or on his own account or as shareholder, director or officer of any other company, save as a shareholder in a public company listed on a recognised stock exchange, unless the company shall expressly consent or request in writing.
There was no question of enforcing the positive part, but could the court enforce the negative aspect of the term? Dean J concluded35 that if he prohibited the defendant in the terms of the negative part of the term he would be ‘virtually putting him out of work altogether’. He held that the injunction should be refused on that ground. A similar approach is taken where an injunction is sought against a third party attempting to induce the employee to breach the contract with the employer. If to restrain the third party would, having regard to the realities of the situation, compel the employee either to work for the employer or to be unemployed, the injunction will not be granted.36 The main reason for not granting an injunction to an employer, namely, that the court will not make an order equivalent to specific performance, applies equally where it is the employee who seeks the injunction. Thus, the court will not grant an injunction (or give equivalent relief)37 to restrain a wrongful dismissal because that would compel the employer to retain the employee’s services and be equivalent to specific performance. But in Hill v C A Parsons & Co Ltd38 a majority of the English Court of Appeal did just that. The justification for the decision perhaps lies in the special [page 962] circumstance that on the facts of the case there was no loss of confidence between the employee and his employers. The defendants had reached an agreement with a trade union to employ only union labour and their dismissal of the plaintiff took place because he refused to join the union. On the other hand, the case may be illustrative of a new approach to wrongful dismissal cases.39 1.
See generally on injunctions Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, Chapter 21.
2.
(1931) 45 CLR 282 at 298.
3.
See Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, para 21-10.
4.
See Meagher, Heydon and Leeming, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, 2002, paras 21-430ff.
5.
(1878) 3 App Cas 709 at 719–20.
6.
See Curro v Beyond Productions Pty Ltd (1993) 30 NSWLR 337 at 346–8.
7.
(1878) 3 App Cas 709 at 719–20 (see [40-03]).
8.
See further [40-07].
9.
(1979) 141 CLR 552 at 573; 26 ALR 355.
10.
See Chapter 39.
11.
See further [40-06].
12.
See, eg Shaw v Applegate [1978] 1 All ER 123; Broken Hill Pty Co Ltd v Hapag-Lloyd Aktiengesellschaft [1980] 2 NSWLR 572 at 581. Cf Hawthorn Football Club Ltd v Harding [1988] VR 49 at 60 (‘residual discretion’).
13.
See Pearson v Arcadia Stores Guyra Ltd [No 1] (1935) 53 CLR 571.
14.
See, eg Measures Bros Ltd v Measures [1910] 2 Ch 248.
15.
(1878) 3 App Cas 709 at 719–20 (see [40-03]).
16.
See [39-03].
17.
See [39-01].
18.
(1931) 45 CLR 282.
19.
(1931) 45 CLR 282 at 298.
20.
(1878) 3 App Cas 709 at 719–20 (see [40-03]).
21.
[1983] 1 NSWLR 513. Contrast Kurt Keller Pty Ltd v BMW Australia Ltd [1984] 1 NSWLR 353.
22.
[1973] 1 All ER 992 at 1005.
23.
(1878) 3 App Cas 709 at 719–20 (see [40-03]).
24.
See, eg J C Williamson Ltd v Lukey (1931) 45 CLR 282 at 299.
25.
Jardin v Metcash Ltd (2011) 285 ALR 677 at 702; [2011] NSWCA 409 at [117] per Meagher JA.
26.
(1979) 141 CLR 552 at 573–4.
27.
(1979) 26 ALR 497.
28.
See, eg Queensland Co-operative Milling Association v Pamag Pty Ltd (1973) 133 CLR 260; 1 ALR 47 (see [26-09]).
29.
(1963) 80 WN (NSW) 801.
30.
(1852) 1 De G M & G 604; 42 ER 687. See S M Waddams, ‘Johanna Wagner and the Rival Opera Houses’ (2001) 117 LQR 431. See also Buckenara v Hawthorn Football Club Ltd [1988] VR 39; Hawthorn Football Club Ltd v Harding [1988] VR 49.
31.
See Spry, Equitable Remedies, 7th ed, 2007, pp 574–606.
32.
(1878) 3 App Cas 709 at 719–20 (see [40-03]).
33.
It is perhaps significant that the contract had less than two months to run when the injunction was granted. See the discussion in Warren v Mendy [1989] 1 WLR 853 esp at 865ff (doubting Warner Bros Pictures Inc v Nelson [1937] 1 KB 209).
34.
[1963] VR 383.
35.
[1963] VR 383 at 386.
36.
Warren v Mendy [1989] 1 WLR 853.
37.
See Lucy v The Commonwealth (1923) 33 CLR 229.
38.
[1972] Ch 305 (approved Turner v Australasian Coal and Shale Employees Federation (1984) 55 ALR 635; see G J McCarry (1985) 59 ALJ 284).
39.
See Andrew Stewart, ‘New Directions in the Law of Employment Termination’ (1989) 1 Bond LR 233, which also examines the impact of reinstatement under industrial awards. See also Ramsey Butchering Services Pty Ltd v Blackadder (2003) 196 ALR 548 at 690; K D Ewing, ‘Remedies for Breach of the Contract of Employment’ [1993] CLJ 405 at 415ff.
[page 963]
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Lloyd’s of London Press Ltd, London, 1995. Merkin, R, ed, Privity of Contract — The Impact of the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999, Lloyd’s of London Press, London, 2000. Meagher, R P, Heydon, J D and Leeming, M J, Meagher, Gummow and Lehane’s Equity: Doctrines and Remedies, 4th ed, Butterworths LexisNexis, Sydney, 2002. Mitchell, Charles and Mitchell, Paul, eds, Landmark Cases in the Law of Contract, Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2008. Murray, J E, Cases and Materials on Contracts, Bobbs Merrill Co Inc, New York, 1969. [page 966] Norton on Deeds, eds Morrison, R J A and Goolden, H J, 2nd ed, Sweet & Maxwell, London, 1928. Nygh, P E and Davies, M, Conflict of Laws in Australia, 7th ed, LexisNexis Butterworths, Sydney, 2002. Palmer, N E, Palmer on Bailment, 3rd ed, Sweet & Maxwell, London, 2009. Parkinson, P, ed, The Principles of Equity, 2nd ed, Thomson Law Book Co, Sydney, 2003. Peden, Elisabeth, Good Faith in the Performance of Contracts, Butterworths, Sydney, 2003. Peden, J R, The Law of Unjust Contracts, Butterworths, Sydney, 1982. Peel, Edwin, Treitel's The Law of Contract, 12th ed, Thomson Sweet & Maxwell, London, 2007. Pollock, F E, Pollock’s Principles of Contract, 8th ed, Stevens & Sons, London, 1911. Rachagan, S, ed, Developing Consumer Law in Asia, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, 1994. Rawls, J, A Theory of Justice, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1973. Reich, N and Micklitz, H-W, Consumer Legislation in the Federal Republic of
Germany, Van Nostrand Reinhold, London, 1981. Reiter, B J and Swan, John, Studies in Contract Law, Butterworth & Co (Canada) Ltd, Toronto, 1980. Reynolds, F M B, Bowstead and Reynolds on Agency, 18th ed, Sweet & Maxwell, London, 2006. Rickett, C E F, ed, Justifying Private Law Remedies, Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2008. Rose, F D, ed, Lex Mercatoria: Essays on International Commercial Law in Honour of Francis Reynolds, LLP, London, 2000. Rossiter, C J, Penalties and Forfeiture, Law Book Co Ltd, Sydney, 1992. Saidov, Djakhongir and Cunnington, Ralph, eds, Contract Damages Domestic and International Perspectives, Hart Publishing, Oxford, 2008. Salmond, J W and Williams, J, Principles of the Law of Contracts, 2nd ed, Sweet & Maxwell, London, 1945. Schlesinger, R B, ed, Formation of Contracts, Oceana, Dobbs Ferry, New York, 1968. Seddon, N C, Government Contracts: Federal, State and Local, 3rd ed, Federation Press, Sydney, 2004. Seddon, N C and Ellinghaus, M P, Cheshire & Fifoot’s The Law of Contract, 8th Aust ed, Butterworths, Sydney, 2002. Simpson, A W B, A History of the Common Law of Contract: the Rise of the Action of Assumpsit, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1975. Spry, I C F, Equitable Remedies, 7th ed, Thomson Law Book Co, Sydney, 2007. Starke J G, Assignments of Choses in Action in Australia, Butterworths, Sydney, 1972. [page 967] Street, T A, Foundations of Legal Liability, New York, 3 vols, 1906. Sutton, K C T, Consideration Reconsidered, University of Queensland Press, 1974.
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Index References are to paragraph numbers Acceptance see Offer and Acceptance Accord and Satisfaction, [6-32], [6-54] Agent commission, right to implied term and, [11-09] wagering and, [25-16] contracts by, [15-50], [15-61], see also Corporations privity of contract and, [16-06] self-styled, [20-42] Agreed Damages see Liquidated Damages Agreed Sum see also Debt; Liquidated Sum; Price acceleration of, [37-02], [37-06], [37-17], [37-31], [37-40] accrued right to, [37-25] characteristics of, [37-02] damages as, [37-07]–[37-17], see also Liquidated Damages deposit as, [37-36] instalments, payable in, [37-06], [37-32] nature of, [37-04] price as, [37-04], [37-05], [37-18]–[37-24], [37-31], see also Price White and Carter case, and, [37-20], [37-21], [37-23], [37-24] Agreement conduct, inferred from, [3-05]
importance of, [3-01] incompleteness, [4-10] agreement to negotiate, [4-14] discretion as to performance and, [4-13] executed contracts in, [4-12] generally, [4-01] implication of terms and, [4-11] negotiate, to, [4-14] offer and acceptance test, [3-02]–[3-06], see also Offer and Acceptance uncertainty absence of meaning as, [4-03] conditional contracts in, [5-09] effect in future, [4-06] external standard, [4-04] generally, [4-01] intention to contract, and, [4-09] interpretation, difficulty of, [4-03] operation, area of, [4-08] reasonableness, and, [4-05] ‘rise and fall’ clauses, [4-07] severance, [4-15], [27-30] ‘subject to contract’, [5-02]–[5-06] first category, [5-03] ‘fourth’ category, [5-06] generally, [5-02] second category, [5-04] third category, [5-05]
‘subject to finance’, [5-07]–[5-08] fulfilment, [5-08] generally, [5-07] upholding of, [4-02] Vienna Convention, impact of, [1-20] Aleatory Contract nature of, [28-38] performance of, [28-38] Anticipatory Breach see Breach; Termination Arbitration Clause nature of, [30-36] public policy and, [25-26] repudiation of, [30-36] Scott v Avery, [25-26], [32-09] stay of proceedings, [25-26] termination of contract and, [32-09], [32-10] Assignment agreement for, [17-04] assignable rights damages, right to, [17-19] debts, [17-02] future interests, [17-04] performance, right to, [17-02] personal rights and, [17-05] prohibitions on assignment and, [17-11] rescission, right of, [17-08] termination, right to, [17-09]
assignee, defined, [17-01] assignor, defined, [17-01] ‘bare’ right of action, of, [25-12] benefit, [17-02] burden, of, [17-05], [17-08] champerty, [17-12] chose in action, meaning, [17-02] concept, [17-03] debtor, defined, [17-07] formalities, [17-07]–[17-12] equitable assignments, [17-07] intention to assign, [17-03] legal assignments, [17-11] absolute, requirement of, [17-07] execution, [17-07] notice, requirements of, [17-07] ‘under hand’ meaning of, [17-07] property right, [17-02] subject matter, identification of, [17-10] future interests, of, [17-04] generally, [17-01] maintenance, and, [17-12], [25-29] mandate, distinguished from, [17-03] meaning, [17-03] novation, distinguished from, [17-06] obligor, defined, [17-01] personal rights, [17-10]
privity of contract and, [16-09], [17-15] see also Privity prohibitions on, [17-11] consent clauses, [17-11] public policy and, [17-09], [17-11], [17-11], [25-29] remedies, [17-13]–[17-15] assignee and obligor damages, recovery of, [17-14] debt, recovery of, [17-13] discharge, [17-13] subject to equities rule, [17-07] restrictions, [17-07]–[17-12] express, [17-11] public policy, [17-12] statute, [17-12] rights and, [17-13]–[17-15] personal, [17-09] statute and, [17-07], [17-12] sub-contracting and, [17-05] subject to equities rule, [17-07] vicarious performance, distinguished from, [17-05], [28-18] Auction, [3-11] see also Offer and Acceptance Australian Consumer Law Competition and Consumer Act and, [1-21] consumer guarantees under see Consumer Guarantees content, [1-22] derivation, [1-21] misleading or deceptive conduct and, [1-22] see also Misleading or
Deceptive Conduct Trade Practices Act and, [1-21] unconscionable conduct and, [1-22] see also Unconscionability unfair contract terms, [1-22] see also Unjust Contracts Legislation Bankruptcy composition with creditors, [6-60] consideration and, [6-60], [7-25] effect of post-bankruptcy contracts, on, [15-62] pre-bankruptcy contracts, on, [15-62] generally, [15-62] preference void, [25-18] Bill of Exchange anticipatory breach of, [30-66] consideration and, [6-33], [6-58] deposit, as, [37-36] payment by, [28-16], [30-36] repudiation of, [30-36] Breach, [29-01]–[29-19] anticipatory contractual right and, [30-35] damages and, [36-02]–[36-05], see also Damages defined, [29-01] duty, standard of, and, [29-13] meaning of, [30-06] apportionment legislation and, [28-27]
arbitration clause, of, [25-26] bad faith performance, by, [29-02] consequences of, [29-18]–[29-19], see also Termination co-operation, absence of, by, [37-21] deviation, by, [14-14] duty, standard of, and, [29-13]–[29-17] absolute, [29-16] ‘actual’ breach, and, [29-13] anticipatory breach, and, [29-13] care, reasonable, [29-14], [29-17] determination of, [29-15] meaning, [29-13] relevance, [29-13] strict, [29-14], [29-16] types of, [29-14] failure to perform, by, [29-04]–[29-17] anticipatory breach and, [29-01], [30-29] concept of, [29-04] consequences of damages, right to, [29-18] defective performance, [29-06] definition, [29-01] duty, standard of, and, [29-13] commercial contract, in, [29-16] construction, based on, [29-15] exclusion clause and, [29-15] express term, [29-15] frustration, doctrine of, and, [29-16]
implied term, [29-15] informal contracts, in, [29-15] skill, special, and, [29-17] excuse for, [28-11] late performance, [29-07]–[29-12] termination for, [30-48]–[30-64], see also Termination non-performance, [29-05] readiness and willingness and, [30-29] repudiation and, [30-29], [30-47] forms of, [29-01] frustration and, [33-15], [33-45], [33-46] fundamental, see also Fundamental Breach; Terms breach of fundamental term as, [14-08] confusion over, [14-07] definition, [14-07] total breach, compared with, [14-10] generally, [29-01]–[29-03] illegality and, [33-21] inevitable, concept of, [30-33] late performance, by common law rule, [29-08], [29-11] equitable remedies and, [29-09], [29-10], [29-12] equitable rule, [29-09], [29-11] statutory rule, [29-11]–[29-12] commercial contract and, [29-12] common law rule and, [29-11] conflict, law and equity, between, [29-10]
English approach to, [29-12] equitable rule and, [29-11] generally, [29-07] option contract and, [29-12] traditional approach to, [29-12] negligence, by, [35-31] onus of proof, [29-03] partial, distinguished from total, [14-10] prospective, problems of, [30-35] remedy of, [30-27], [31-02] termination and, [31-02] repetition of, repudiation and, [30-38] repudiation, by, [30-06], see also Repudiation repudiatory, [30-08] substantial performance doctrine and, [28-32] termination for see Termination total, [14-10], [30-07] Capacity see Bankrupts; Corporations; Crown; Married Women; Mental Disability; Minors; Unincorporated Associations Champerty see Maintenance Chose in Action assignment of, [16-09], see also Assignment debt as, [37-26] Collateral Contract consideration for, [10-11], [10-14], [27-26] consistency requirement, [10-13], [10-14] elements of, [10-12]
evidence of, [12-11] exclusion clause and, [14-19] guarantee of truth in, [10-12] illegality and, [27-26] intention and, [10-12] nature of, [10-11] pre-contractual statement, based on, [10-11]–[10-14] privity rule and, [10-14] reliance and, [10-12] third party, with, [10-14] types, [10-11] Commercial Construction see also Construction incidents of, [2-24] principles, [2-23] Compromise see also Consideration public policy and, [25-26] Condition see also Condition Precedent; Condition Subsequent breach of damages and, [36-15] termination for see Termination contingency, where, [13-07] definition, [13-04] goods, sale of, in, [13-04], [13-19] important term, as, [13-03] intermediate term and, [13-04] ‘proper’ meaning, [13-07] synonym for ‘term’, where, [13-07]
term of art, as, [13-07] types of, [30-11] warranty, distinguished from, [13-03]–[13-09] weaknesses of, [13-06] Condition Precedent condition subsequent, distinguished from, [13-18] failure, [28-24] meaning, [13-18] pleading of, [13-18] sale of goods law, [13-20] term of contract, as, [13-19] Condition Subsequent condition precedent, distinguished from, [13-18] meaning, [13-18] pleading of, [13-18] term of contract, as, [13-19] Consideration accord and satisfaction, [6-32], [6-54] act as, [6-03] adequacy of, [6-25]–[6-27] nominal, [6-27] restraint of trade, where, [26-11] severance and, [27-36] undue influence and, [23-14] assumpsit, [6-05] benefit/detriment, as, [6-08], [6-17] bilateral contracts, and, [6-13]
collateral contract, in, [10-11], [10-14], [27-26] compositions with creditors, [6-60] compromise, [6-50]–[6-55] claim and bad, [6-51] frivolous, [6-53] vexatious, [6-53] forbearance to sue, [6-55] honesty and, [6-52] identification of consideration, [6-54] condition, and, [6-03] conditional gift promise, [6-16] debt, part payment of, [6-56]–[6-60] deed and, [6-58] nominal consideration and, [6-58] rule, [6-56], [6-57] third party, by, [6-59] definition, [6-07]-[6-11] bargain theory, [6-09] benefit as, [6-08] conclusion on, [6-11] detriment as, [6-08] generally, [6-07] reason for enforcement, as, [6-12] discharge of contract, and, [7-24] doctrine, reasons for, [6-01] evidence as, [6-06]
executed, [6-14], [6-18], [6-23], [6-29]–[6-32] concept, [6-29] implied promise and, [6-31] request for, [6-30] executory contracts, in, [6-11] failure of, [6-33], [33-53], [33-54], [34-09], [37-38], [38-06], see also Restitution ‘for’ promise, [6-02], [6-03], [6-04] forbearance as, [6-07]–[6-09] form and, [6-06] good faith and, [2-15], [6-53] illusory, [6-36]–[6-40] concept of, [6-36] discretionary promise, [6-38] executory consideration, [6-37] promise not to complain, [6-39] requirements contract, [6-40] uncertain, [6-39] vague, [6-39] intention to create legal relations, [6-06], [8-01], [8-02] legal duty, existing, [6-32], [6-41]–[6-64] classes of duty, [6-41] contractual, [6-44]–[6-64] exceptions, [6-46]–[6-48] content different, [6-46] exclusion clause, and, [6-49] factual benefit, [6-48]
termination of contract, [6-47] third party, owed to, [6-49] generally, [6-44]–[6-45] promise to exceed, [6-45] criticism, [6-61]–[6-64] business practice and, [6-64] economic duress, and, [6-63] public duties, [6-42]–[6-43] policy and, [6-42] promise to exceed, [6-43] rule, [6-41], [6-42], [6-44] legality of, [6-24] severance and, [27-31] Lord Mansfield and, [6-06] moral obligation, [6-06] motive, and, [6-15], [6-29] movement from promisee, [6-19]–[6-22] joint promisees, [6-22] privity, and, [6-20] promisor, not to, [6-21] rule, [6-19] necessity of, [6-01], [6-02] past, [6-28]–[6-35] exceptions to, [6-33]–[6-35] acknowledgment of debt, [6-34] bill of exchange, [6-33] ratification, [6-55]
executed consideration and, [6-29]– [6-32] rule, [6-28] performance as, [27-36] price of promise, as, [6-07], [6-09] promissory estoppel and, [7-01]–[7-23], see also Estoppel referability of, [6-15]–[6-18] gift promises and, [6-16] Woollen Mills case and, [6-18] sufficiency, [6-25] tortious liability, [6-03] unilateral contract, and, [6-08], [6-14], [6-15] variation of contract, and, [7-25] waiver and, [7-26]–[7-29] effect, [7-29] election as, [7-27] estoppel as, [7-28] writing, and, [6-06] Construction see also Exclusion Clause approach to, [12-04] classification of terms, [13-01]–[13-24] breach, gravity of, and, [13-06] consumer contracts, in, [13-14] conventional descriptions and, [13-11] exclusion clauses and, [13-14] generally, [13-06] goods, sale of, in, [13-04], [13-05], [13-13], [13-14] English law, [13-13]
intention and, [13-14] purpose, [13-01] statutory, [13-04], [13-05], [13-11], [13-13], [13-14], [30-20] time stipulation, [30-49] tripartite, [13-02]–[13-15] agreed damages clause and, [13-24] basis of, [13-02] definitional term and, [13-21] essential term and, [13-20] exclusion clause and, [13-22] fundamental term and, [13-20] procedural term and, [13-23] scope of, [13-10] ‘commercial’, [2-23]–[2-24] contractual right and, [30-09] definition, [12-01] duty, standard of, and, [29-15] ‘entire’ contract and, [28-23] factual matrix, evidence of, and, [12-13]–[12-15] aim of contract, [12-13] commercial purpose, [12-13] concept, [12-13] frustration and, [33-08] object of contract, [12-13] surrounding circumstances, as, [12-14] frustration and, [33-49] good faith and, [2-07]
implied terms, [30-20]–[30-21] intention and, [12-03] intermediate, as, [30-22]–[30-23] issues of, [12-04] law, issue of, [12-02], [33-05] legal effect, determining, [12-01] meaning, determining, [12-01] merger clause, [12-08], [19-20] parol evidence rule, [12-05]–[12-12] application of, [12-07]–[12-08] integration and, [12-08] terms of the bargain and, [12-07] conclusion on, [12-16] condition, breach of, and, [30-13], [30-17] evidence excluded, [12-09]–[12-12] conduct of parties, [12-12] documentary evidence, [12-09] intention, [12-10] negotiations, [12-11] exceptions to, [12-16]–[12-23] ambiguity, [12-18] conduct of parties and, [12-12], [12-18], [12-19], [12-20] consideration, [12-21] contract, enforceability of, and, [12-16] course of dealing, [12-20] custom, [12-20] estoppel and, [12-12], [12-18], [12-20]
generally, [12-16] identity of parties, [12-22] implied terms, [12-19] pleadings and, [12-23] rectification, [12-23] relationship of parties, [12-22] rights, enforceability of, and, [12-16] subject matter of contract, [12-17] usage, [12-20] formulations of, [12-01] suggested, [12-02] generally, [12-05] Consumer Guarantees Australian Consumer Law, under, [11-26] guarantees, [11-28]–[11-32] remedies, [11-33]–[11-37] rights, [11-33]–[11-37] ‘consumer’ and, [11-27] damages, [11-34], [11-35], [11-36] consequential loss, [11-37] failure to comply with, [11-34] major failure, [11-35], [11-36] generally, [11-26] goods, in relation to, [11-29] acceptable quality, [11-30] express warranties, [11-31] rejection of, [11-35]
services, in relation to, [11-36] termination, contract, of, [11-36] Trade Practices Act and, [11-26] Consumer Protection Australian contract law and, [1-17] consumer guarantees see Consumer Guarantees credit contract, [25-17] exclusion clause, [14-23]–[14-25], [25-17] misleading or deceptive conduct and, [19-01], [19-02], [19-06] Contra Proferentem see Exclusion Clause Contract see also Contract Law bilateral, [6-08] ‘contract’ or ‘contracts’, [1-03] ‘death of ’, [1-05] definition, [1-13] formal, [6-12] history, [1-04]–[1-07] importance, decline of, [1-13] intent and, [1-10] role of, [1-14]–[1-16] business, in, [1-16] certainty and, [1-14] cost and, [1-15] dispute resolution, [1-15] simple, [6-12] tort and see Tort unilateral, [3-49], [6-14]
Contract Law see also Contract assumptions of, [1-08]–[1-09], [1-13] ‘Australian’, [1-17]–[1-19] ‘flavour’ of, [1-17] innovation, [1-18] internationalisation, [1-19] modernisation, [1-19] content, [1-04] good faith, and, [2-03], [2-16], [2-19] obligations, law of, and, [1-07] role of, [1-14]–[1-16] theory of, [1-10]–[1-13] objective, [1-10], [3-06], [20-13] perspectives on, [1-12] subjective, [1-10], [3-06] unitary, [1-06] will, [1-10], [1-11], [3-06] tort law, and, [1-07] Contracts Requiring Written Evidence absence of writing, effect of, [9-19]– [9-24] common law, impact on, [9-19]–[9-20] contract unenforceable, [9-19] debt, recovery of, [9-20] quantum meruit, [9-20] restitutionary claim, [9-20] severable promises, [9-19] equity, in, [9-21]–[9-24]
part performance doctrine, [9-21]–[9-24] basis for, [9-21] damages claim and, [9-24] land, mainly applied to, [9-24] payment of money and, [9-21] performance of contract, [9-22] possession of land and, [9-21] referability of acts to contract, [9-22] scope of, [9-24] specific performance and, [9-24] uncertainty of, [9-21] bill of exchange, [9-12] compliance with requirements, [9-13]– [9-18] credit contract, [9-12] estoppel and, [9-21], [9-27] general rule, [9-01] goods, sale of, [9-16]–[9-18] ‘acceptance’, [9-11], [9-17] note or memorandum, [9-16] alternatives to, [9-16]–[9-18] payment, earnest, in, [9-18] payment, part, [9-18] marine insurance, [9-12] misrepresentation, and, [18-05] note or memorandum, [9-13]–[9-15] authenticated signature fiction, [9-14] contents of, [9-13]
documents, joinder of, [9-15] signature, [9-14] rescission of contract, [9-26] Statute of Frauds under, [9-02]–[9-12] administrator, special promises of, [9-06] Australian law and, [9-05] executor, special promises of, [9-06] goods, sale of, [9-11] ‘goods’, [9-11] ‘value’, [9-11] work and materials and, [9-11] guarantee, contracts of, [9-07] land, contracts involving, [9-09] legislation, other, and, [9-12] marriage, contracts in consideration of, [9-08] one year, contract not to be performed in, [9-10] purpose of, [9-02] section 4, [9-03] section 17, [9-04] variation of contract and, [9-25] estoppel, distinguished from, [9-27] forbearance, distinguished from, [9-27] manner of performance, and, [9-27] mode of performance, and, [9-27] rescission, distinguished from, [9-26] test of, [9-26] Contributory Negligence see Damages
Co-promisees see Plurality of Parties Co-promisors see Plurality of Parties Corporations contracts by, [15-47] definition, [15-46] formation and expression of assent, [15-50]–[18-52] agency principles, [15-50] common seal, [18-51] company agents, contracts by, [15-51] Corporations Act, under, [15-51] other corporations, of, [15-52] pre-incorporation contracts, [15-53]– [15-54] Corporations Act, under, [15-54] general law, under, [15-53] ultra vires, [15-48]–[15-49] Australian legislation, [15-49] Corporations Act, [15-49] doctrine of, [15-48] registered companies, [18-51] statutory companies, [18-52] Crown agency principles, [15-61] capacity to contract, [15-58]–[15-61] fettering of discretion, [15-60] litigant, as, [15-58] Parliamentary control, [15-60] procedure, [15-58]
ultra vires, [15-59] Damages acceleration of, [37-17] accrued right, to, [32-05] adequacy of condition, breach of, and, [30-18] specific performance and, [39-02], [39-04], [39-06] anticipatory breach, for, [36-02]–[36-05], [36-17] date of, [36-04] goods, sale of, in, [36-04], [36-05] market prices and, [36-05] mitigation and, [36-05] problems of, [36-03] termination, required for, [36-02] assessment of, [35-10]–[35-18] basis of, [35-10]–[35-13] combined claim, [35-13] expectation interest, [35-10] general rule, [35-10] reliance interest, [35-11] restitution, [35-12] date for, [35-14]–[35-16] anticipatory breach, [36-04] ‘appropriate’, [35-15] general rule, [35-14] breach, date of, as, [35-14]
exceptions to, [35-15] hearing, at, [35-15] justice and, [35-15] Lord Cairns’ Act under, [36-28], [36-29] difficulty of, [35-17]–[35-18] bar, no, [35-17] basis for, and, [35-18] chance, loss of, and, [36-19] liquidated damages and, [37-15] speculative claim, where, [35-17] award of accrued rights and, [36-17] contingencies, effect of, on, [36-17] discount of, [35-16], [36-16], [36-24] method of limiting, [35-19] subsequent events and, [36-17] Bain v Fothergill rule in, [35-11], [36-21]–[36-22] common law, at, [36-21] exceptions to, [36-21] statute, under, [36-21], [36-22] bargain, loss of, for, [35-10], [36-14] breach, confers right to, [29-18] building, reinstatement of, by, [36-11]–[36-12] diminished value and, [36-11] intention of plaintiff and, [36-12] mitigation and, [36-12] causation and, [35-03], [35-19]–[35-22]
‘but for’ test, [35-20] chain of, [35-20], [35-22] breaks in, [35-22] concurrent causes, [35-21] connection required, [35-20] contributory negligence and, [35-29], [35-32] knowledge of parties, [35-21] multiple causes, [35-21] plaintiff and, [35-22] termination and, [36-15] chance, loss of, for, [36-19]–[36-20] concept of, [36-19] principles, [36-20] compensation principle, [35-03] contract and tort compared, [35-26] contributory negligence and, [35-29]–[35-31] causation and, [35-29], [35-32] defence, as common law, at, [35-29] generally, [35-29] statute, under, [35-30]–[35-32] tort in, [35-29], [35-30] legislation, [35-30]–[35-32] application of, [35-29], [35-30], [35-31] concurrent duty and, [35-31] contract, to, [35-29], [35-31], [35-32] generally, [35-29]
negligence, where, [35-31], [35-32] strict liability, cases of, [35-32] tort, to, [35-29], [35-30] ‘wrong’ and, [35-29], [35-31] debt and, [37-01], [37-20] delay, for, [36-06]–[36-07] generally, [36-06] goods, sale of, in, [35-39], [35-41], [36-07] Hadley v Baxendale rule in, and, [36-07] liquidated, [37-15] money, payment of, in, [36-07] disappointment, for, [36-08], [36-09] entertainment contract, [36-09] discomfort, for, [36-09] distress, mental, for, [36-08] equity, in, [36-25] exemplary, [35-03] expectation, [35-10] expenditure and, [35-11], [36-01] generally, [35-11] pre-contract, [36-01] failure of consideration and, [37-38] frustration and, [34-07], [34-16] general, distinguished from special, [35-09] generally, [35-03]–[35-18] goods, sale of, in, [35-02], [35-11], [35-12], [35-38]–[35-44], [36-17] anticipatory breach, for, [36-04], [36-05]
buyer, recovery of, by, [35-38], [35-41]–[35-42], [35-43], [35-44] condition, breach of, [35-38] delay, for, [35-39], [35-41] acceptance, in, [35-39] delivery, in, [35-41] non-acceptance, for, [28-15], [35-40], [35-43], [36-07] market, availability of, [35-43] resale by seller and, [28-15] non-delivery, for, [29-05], [35-42], [35-43] anticipatory breach and, [36-04] market, availability of, and, [35-43] warranty, breach of, and, [35-38] physical loss and, [35-38] prima facie rules, [35-38], [35-40], [35-41], [35-42] secondhand, [35-40], [35-43] seller, recovery of, by, [35-39]–[35-40], [35-43], [35-44] supply and demand in, [35-40] warranty, breach of, for, [35-38] Hadley v Baxendale rule in, [35-08]– [35-09] general damages and, [35-09] limbs of, [35-08], [35-24]–[35-28] first, [35-08], [35-24]–[35-26], [35-38], [35-40], [35-42] second, [35-08], [35-27]–[35-28], [35-44], [36-07] special damages and, [35-09] stated, [35-08] illegality and, [27-06] inconvenience, for, [36-09]
inflation, relevance of, to [36-24] injured feelings, for, [36-08] Lord Cairns’ Act under, [36-25]–[36-29] assessment, date of, [36-28] common law and, [36-25], [36-27], [36-29] discretion and, [36-25] injunction and, [36-25] specific performance and, [36-25], [36-26], [36-27], [36-29] addition to, in [36-25], [36-27] substitution for, in, [36-25], [36-26] loss, proof of, and, [35-05]–[35-07] identification of, [35-07] nominal, and, [35-06] onus of, [35-05] substantial, and, [35-06] misleading or deceptive conduct see Misleading or Deceptive Conduct misrepresentation, for, see Misrepresentation mitigation of, [35-33]–[35-37] anticipatory breach, where, [36-05] benefit obtained and, [35-34] breach and, [35-34], [35-37] debt and, [35-37], [37-20] definition, [35-33] duty, [35-35] generally, [35-33] losses and, [35-35]–[35-36] increasing, [35-36]
minimising, [35-35] scope of, [35-37] money, payment of, and, [35-16], [36-07] nominal, [35-06], [35-17], [35-18] pain and suffering, for, [36-08] particular issues of, [36-01]–[36-29] performance, method of, and, [36-18] primary obligation, breach of, [35-01] publicity, loss of, for, [36-10] punitive, [35-03], [36-08] purpose of, [35-03]–[35-04] compensation as, [35-03] contract and tort, in, [35-04] reliance, [35-11] remoteness of, [35-19], [35-23]–[35-28] concept, [35-23] contract and tort, [35-04], [35-26] fact, question of, [35-23] Hadley v Baxendale under, [35-24]– [35-28] certainty, degree of, [35-24] criterion for, [35-24] knowledge, special, and, [35-27], [35-28] risk of loss, acceptance of, and, [35-28] ‘usual course of things’, [35-24]–[35-25], [35-26] foresight and, [35-24], [35-26] illustrations, [35-25] termination and, [36-15]
repudiation and, [35-16] reputation, loss of, for, [36-10] restitution and, [35-12], [35-13], [38-03], [38-23], [38-26] right to, [35-01]–[35-02] breach, existence of, and, [35-01] termination of contract and, [35-02] secondary obligation, as, [35-01], [38-26] substantial, [35-06] taxation, relevance of, to, [36-23] termination, after, [35-16], [36-02], [36-13]–[36-17] anticipatory breach, and, [36-17] bargain, loss of, and, [36-14] causation and, [36-15] condition, breach of, and, [36-15] contractual right and, [36-15] divested, not, [36-13] essential term, breach of, and, [36-15] frustration, by, [36-13] remoteness and, [36-15] right to, and, [36-13] vexation, for, [36-08] waiver and, [31-06] Debt see also Liquidated Sum damages and distinguished from, [37-01], [37-20] illustrations, [37-04] set-off against, [37-02]
due, demand for, [28-14] illegality and, [27-06] liquidated sum, as, [37-02] non-payment of, breach and, [37-01], [37-02] damages and, [37-01] payment of, [28-16] third party, by, [28-18] recovery of indebitatus assumpsit, by, [37-01] mitigation of loss and, [37-01], [37-20] onus of proof and, [37-01] performance, prevention of, and, [37-02] procedural advantages of, [37-01] tender and, [37-01] termination, after, [32-05] tender of money and, [28-15] Deceit see Misrepresentation Deed, [6-12], [6-27] severance in, [27-31] Delay see also Time damages for, [36-06]–[36-07] election and, [31-18] frustration by, [33-13], [33-25]–[33-27] performance, in see Performance rescission and, [18-50] specific performance and, [39-09] termination for see Termination
Dependency of Obligation severance and, [27-36] Deposit see also Restitution earnest, payment in, as, [9-18], [37-36] extravagant, [38-33] forfeiture of, [37-39] forfeiture, relief against, and, [37-41] statute, under, [38-34] liquidated sum, as, [37-36] option in, [37-37] payment of breach and, [37-37] existence of contract and, [37-37] penalty, as, [37-39] possession of, [37-37] price, portion of, as, [37-36] recovery of, [37-36]–[37-37], [37-39], [37-41], [38-33] basis for, [37-36] cases on, [37-37] forfeiture clause and, [37-36] law, uncertainty of, [37-37] security for performance, as, [37-36], [37-37] Discharge abandonment, by, [31-12] agreement, by see Consideration frustration, by see Frustration termination, by see Termination
Duress economic, [22-11]–[22-13] consideration and, [22-13] good faith and, [2-15] payments under compulsion, [22-11] elements of, [22-14]–[22-16] analysis of, [22-15] consideration and, [22-16] generally, [22-14] forms of, [22-07]–[22-13] generally, [22-07] goods, to, [22-09] payment/agreement distinction and, [22-10] person, to, [22-08] generally, [22-02]–[22-06] basis for, [22-03] causation and, [22-05] effect of, [22-02] ‘overborne’ will and, [22-04] voidable contract, [22-02] paradigm case, [22-04] pressure, illegitimacy of, [22-17]–[22-23] bona fides and, [22-20] commercial pressure, as, [22-18] consequences of, [22-22] generally, [22-17] lawful, [22-19]
protest and, [22-23] wrongful conduct as, [22-21] proof, burden of, [22-06] remedies for, [22-26]–[22-30] damages as, [22-29] generally, [22-26] rescission as, [22-27] restitution for, [22-12], [22-28] statute, under, [22-30] third parties, and, [22-24]–[22-25] against, [22-25] by, [22-24] unconscionability, and, [22-01], [22-21], [23-16], [24-08] undue influence, and, [22-01], [23-16] Election acceptance of repudiation, as, [30-45] breach, continuing, where, [31-06] breach, once and for all, where, [31-06] common law, at, [31-04] communication of, [31-04] consideration and, [7-26]–[7-29] continue performance, to, [31-05], [31-06], [37-18]–[37-24] co-operation and, [37-21]–[37-22] active, [37-21] passive, [37-22] finality of, [31-06]
legitimate interest and, [37-23]–[37-24] basis of, [37-24] equitable jurisdiction and, [37-23] onus of proof in, [37-24] uncertainty about, [37-24] repudiation and, [30-47] right of, [37-18] specific performance and, [37-19] White and Carter case and, [37-20], [37-21], [37-23], [37-24] contractual provision, under, [31-13] delay in, [31-18] finality of, [31-06] forfeiture and, [31-04] frustration and, [34-03] inconsistent conduct and, [31-05], [31-07] knowledge and, [31-05] performance, methods of, between, [28-17] remedies, between, [31-05], [31-07] repudiation, and, [30-30] requirement of, [31-02] rights, between, [31-05] specific performance and, [31-07] statute, under, [31-04] terminate, to, [31-01]–[31-07] finality of, [31-06] requirements of, [31-04] termination and continuation, between, [29-19], [31-01], [31-02]
time allowed, [31-18] unequivocal, must be, [31-04] waiver as, [31-06] Entire Contracts, [28-22]–[28-35] construction, issue of, [28-23] definition, [28-22] ‘doctrine’ of, [28-24] breach and, [28-24] criticism, [28-33]–[28-35] substantial performance and, [28-34] unjust enrichment and, [28-35] statutory modifications, [28-27]– [28-29] apportionment, [28-27] employment contracts, [28-28] frustrated contracts, [28-29] substantial performance and, [28-30]–[28-35] basis for, [28-34] condition precedent and, [28-32] effect of, [28-31] origin of law, [28-30] scope of, [28-32] severable contracts and, [28-32] uncertainty of, [28-32], [28-34] what constitutes, [28-32] examples of, [28-23] severable contracts and defined, [28-25]
distinguished from, [28-25]–[28-26], [28-33] enforcement of contract and, [28-26] terminology of, [28-33] Essential Term see also Terms classification of term as, [13-20] Estoppel assurance, based on, [31-10] common law, at, [7-18] detriment, requirement of, [31-08], [31-09], [31-10] effect of, [31-08] equity, in, [7-02] forms, [7-02] frustration and, [34-03] generally, [7-01]–[7-06] illegality, in cases of, [27-09] impact, [7-01] knowledge and, [31-08] object of, [7-03], [31-08] performance, co-operation in, and, [28-09] promise, based on, [31-10] promissory, [7-01]–[7-23], [31-10] elements of, [7-14]–[7-18] detriment as, [7-16] express, promise [7-15] generally, [7-14] implied, promise [7-15] reliance as, [7-16]
representation and, [7-18], [31-10] unconscionability and, [7-17] operation of, [7-19]–[7-23] American law, under, [7-23] assumption, giving effect to, [7-22] equity, enforcement of, [7-21] generally, [7-19] suspension of rights, [7-20] termination of rights, [7-20] pre-existing legal relation, no, [7-10]–[7-13] agreed terms, where, [7-12] consideration and, [7-11] generally, [7-09] proprietary interest and, [7-13] pre-existing legal relation, where, [7-07]–[7-09] Australian law, [7-09] generally, [7-07] Hughes’ case and, [7-08] remedies for, [7-19]–[7-23] damages, [7-21] equity, enforcement of, [7-21] sword, as, [7-11] proprietary, [7-02], [7-13] public policy and, [27-33] relevance, [7-06] reliance and, [7-04] representation, by, [31-08]
clear, must be, [31-10] fact, of, [31-09] repudiation and, [30-45], [30-47] silence and, [31-08] termination, right of, as restriction on, [31-08], [31-09], [31-17] unconscionability and, [7-05], [7-17], [31-17] waiver and, [7-26]–[7-29] Exception Clause see Exclusion Clause Exclusion Clause, [14-01]–[14-25] analogous terms, [14-01] benefit of one party only, [14-01] contractual intent, destruction of, by, [14-13] damages and, [14-19] defence to action for breach, as, [14-02] definition of duty, as, [14-02] standard of, and, [29-15] function of, [14-02] generally, [14-01]–[14-02] incorporation of, [10-15]–[10-19], see also Terms operation of, [14-03]–[14-25] bailment contract, [14-14], [14-15] collateral contract, and, [14-19] construction of, [14-03]–[14-21] basic issue, as, [14-03] contra proferentem, [14-04], [14-05], [14-17] ‘deviation’ cases, [14-14] different article, supply of, [14-11], [14-12]
Flight v Booth rule in, [14-12] ‘four corners’ rule, [14-15] fundamental breach, where, [14-07], [14-08] fundamental term, where, [14-08] limitation clause, [14-05] ‘main purpose’ rule, [14-13] negligence, where, [14-16]–[14-17] construction, issue of, [14-16] contra proferentem rule and, [14-17] express reference to, [14-17] head of damage, relevance to, [14-17] liability for, exclusion of ‘all liability’, [14-16] ‘any loss’, [14-16] reasonableness of, [14-18] seriousness of breach and, [14-06]–[14-12] strict liability, where, [14-17] termination and, [14-21] ‘total’ breach, where, [14-10], [14-11] ‘wilful’ breach, where, [14-09] estoppel and, [14-19] oral promise, where, [14-19] oral representation, where, [14-19] rule of law, no, [14-07], [14-08], [14-10] statute, under, [14-22]–[14-25] construction and, [14-23] consumer contract, where, [14-25]
fairness and, [14-24] forms of control, [14-22] goods, sale of, where, [14-23], [14-24], [14-25] misleading or deceptive conduct and, [19-19] permitted use of, [14-24] prohibition of, [14-23] scope of, [14-25] privity and, [14-20], [16-24]–[16-27], see also Privity of Contract termination of contract and, [31-11], [32-09], [32-11] breach and, [14-01] statute and, [32-11] traditional approach to, [14-02] tripartite classification and, [13-22] types, [14-01] void, [14-23], [14-25], [25-17] Exemption Clause see Exclusion Clause Forfeiture deposit, of, [37-36] provision for, security, as, [31-13] relief against acceleration clause and, [37-40] agreed sum and, [37-39] appropriate, when, [31-13] commercial contract, in, [31-13] credit contract and, [37-41] deposit and, [37-39], [37-41], [38-33]
discharge and, [32-03] interest required, [31-13] jurisdiction to grant, [31-13], [31-14] inherent, [31-13] statutory, [28-37], [31-14] land, interest in, of lease, [28-37], [31-14] sale, [31-13], [38-32], [38-33] liquidated damages, where, [37-10], [37-17], [37-39], [37-40] object of contract and, [31-13] option contract and, [31-13] part payment, [37-40] penalty, of, [38-32] restitution see Restitution service contract, in, [31-13] ‘special heads’, [31-13] specific performance and, [37-40], [38-32], [38-34] statute, under, [31-12] termination and, [31-13]-[31-14], [37-39], [37-40] uncertainty and, [31-13] unconscionability and, [31-13] Formalities see Contracts Requiring Written Evidence Forms of Action see also Restitution assumpsit, [1-05] covenant, [1-05] debt, [1-05] indebitatus assumpsit, [1-05]
trespass, [1-05] Fraud see Misrepresentation Freedom of Contract conceptions of contract and, [1-13] generally, [1-08], [1-13] illegality and, [25-19] restraint of trade and, [26-03] Frustration ‘absolute’ contract and, [33-03], [33-51] concept of, [33-01] consequences of, [34-01]–[34-42] common law, at, [34-02]–[34-11], [34-12] application of, [34-01] defects in, [34-12] discharge as, [34-02]–[34-05] automatic, [34-02] delay and, [34-02] election and, [34-03] estoppel and, [34-03] partial, [34-04] suspension of performance, and, [34-05] liabilities, on, [34-09] liquidated sum, on, [37-25], [37-27] rescission, no, [34-06] restitution and, [34-10]–[34-11], see also Restitution partial performance, after, [34-10] rights, on, [34-06]–[34-09]
damages, to, [34-07] unconditional, [34-09] terms, [34-08] New South Wales legislation, under, [34-13]–[34-22] apportionment under, [34-13] attributable value and, [34-18] benefits received and, [34-17]– [34-18] ‘attributable cost’ and, [34-18] full performance, [34-17] partial performance, [34-18] ‘value’ of agreed return for, and, [34-17] court, adjustment by, [34-22] damages and, [34-16] discharge and, [34-15] expenditure, wasted, and, [34-20] function of, [34-22] money paid and, [34-19] recovery, basis of, [34-21] scope of, [34-14] severable contracts, in, [34-14] South Australian legislation, under, [34-36]–[34-42] adjustment under, [34-39] application of, [34-37] discharge under, [34-38] discretion under, [34-39] generally, [34-36] recovery, basis of, [34-42]
valuation under, [34-40]–[34-41] benefit, [34-40] cost, [34-41] statute, under, [34-12]–[34-42] application of, [34-01] Victorian legislation, under, [34-23]–[34-35] benefits obtained, [34-27] discharge and, [34-24] expenses and, [34-26], [34-28] insurance and, [34-29] ‘just sum’ and, [34-27] model for, [34-23] money paid and, [34-25] recovery, basis of, [34-35] scope of, [34-23], [34-32], [34-33] severable contracts, [34-34] terms dealing with, [34-31] third parties and, [34-30] consideration, failure of, and, [33-54] discharge and, [34-09] impossibility of performance, [33-53] construction and, [33-06], [33-08] delay, by, [33-13], [33-25]–[33-27] assessment of, time for, [33-26] certainty and, [33-26] commercial contract in, [33-25], [33-26] criterion of, [33-25]
‘frustrating’ as, [33-25] inference of, [33-26], [33-27] prospective, [33-27] repudiation and, [30-44] ‘unreasonable’ as, [33-25] descriptions of, [33-01], [33-02] doctrine of, [33-01]-[33-37] basis for, [33-49]–[33-56] consideration, failure of, as, [33-53], [33-54] construction as, [33-49], [33-56] foundation, disappearance of, as, [33-52], [33-56] implied term as, [33-50], [33-52], [33-56] importance of, [33-56] impossibility as, [33-53], [33-54] ‘just’ solution as, [33-51] mistake as, [33-55] generally, [33-01]–[33-04] scope of, [33-11]–[33-37] type of contract and, [33-04] duty, standard of, and, [29-16] evidence of, [33-07]–[33-10] cases, relevance of, [33-10] conduct of parties as, [33-09] construction and, [33-08] event, [33-09] factual matrix and, [33-08] generally, [33-07]
purpose of, [33-09] time, relevant, [33-09] factual elements, [33-06] fault and, [33-14], [33-43] force majeure and, [34-05] foresight of, [33-38]–[33-39] extent of, and, [33-39] general rule of, [33-38] standard of, [33-39] good faith and, [2-09], [2-15] illegality as, [33-21]–[33-24], [33-29], [34-04] enemy, contract with, [33-23], [33-41] foundation of contract and, [33-24] generally, [33-21] impossibility and, [33-22] suspension of performance, [34-05] temporary, [33-24] impossibility as, [33-11]–[33-17], [33-29], [33-53] breach and, [33-15] death and, [33-15] illegality and, [33-22] illness as, [33-15] incapacity and, [33-15] performance and, [33-16]–[33-17] burden of, [33-17] method of, [33-16] physical, [33-11]
risk and, [33-12], [33-31], [33-33], [33-35], [33-38] scope of, [33-11] subject matter of contract and, [33-12]–[33-13] availability of, [33-13] destruction of, [33-12] supply, source of, and, [33-14] intermediate term, breach of, and, [30-25] land contract, of, [33-31]–[33-37] generally, [33-31] lease, of, [33-34]–[33-37] agreement for, [33-34] Australian law, [33-36] duration of and, [33-37] English law, [33-35] illustrations, [33-37] licence and, [33-35] option contract, [33-32] sale of, [33-33] law, conclusion of, as, [33-05], [33-06] Paradine v Jane rule in, [33-03] price, recovery of, after, [28-21] purpose, of, [33-18]–[33-20] disappointment and, [33-20] expectations of parties and, [33-20] Krell v Henry and, [33-18] scope of, [33-18] uncontemplated event and, [33-19]
repudiation and, [30-45] risk and, [33-20] self-induced, [33-14], [33-43]–[33-48] act of party, [33-43], [33-44], [33-45] both parties, by, [33-48] breach and, [33-45] causation and, [33-47] deliberateness of, [33-44], [33-45] discharge and, [34-02] general rule, [33-43] omission by party, [33-43], [33-44] onus of proof in, [33-46] terms dealing with, [33-40]–[33-42] frustration under, [33-42] public policy and, [33-41] scope of, [33-40] war as, [33-28]–[33-30] contract, time of, and, [33-30] declaration of, [33-28] generally, [33-28] illegality and, [33-29] impossibility and, [33-29] Fundamental Breach anticipatory breach, and, [30-35] intermediate term, and, [30-25] termination for, [30-07] Fundamental Term see also Terms
breach of, [14-08] classification of term as, [13-20] condition, distinguished from, [13-20], [14-08] Gaming see Illegal Contracts Good Faith breach and, [2-10], [29-02], [31-17] damages and, [2-10] compromise and, [2-15], [6-53] consideration and, [2-15], [6-53] construction of contract and, [2-07] development of, [1-13], [28-09], [31-17], [38-17] formation of contract and, [2-04] incompleteness, [2-15], [4-14] uncertainty, [2-15] frustration of contract and, [2-09], [2-15] generally, [2-01]-[2-03] implied term, as, [2-05], [2-19]–[2-21] inherent in contract, as, [2-01], [2-03], [2-16], [2-19] meaning of, [2-12]–[2-14] ‘honesty’ as, [2-12] reasonableness, not, [2-13] unconscionable conduct and, [2-14] negotiations and express term, [2-15], [4-14] implied term, [11-05], [28-09], [29-02] renegotiation of contract, [2-15]
performance and, [2-16]–[2-20], [28-09], [29-02] co-operation and, [2-17] exclusion of, [2-20] general term, no, [2-19] generally, [2-16] insurance law, [2-18] reasonableness, and, [2-02], [2-05], [2-13], [2-14], [2-19]–[2-21] relevance of, [2-04]–[2-11] renegotiation of contract and, [2-15] remedies and, [2-10] role, [2-04]–[2-11] contract rules and, [2-11] terms, implication of, and, [2-05], [2-19] terms, incorporation of, and, [2-06] termination and, [2-21]–[2-22], [31-17] construction and, [2-22] Renard case and, [2-21] vitiating factors and, [2-08], [2-15] Goods, sale of, see Sale of Goods Illegal Contracts see also Public Policy analysis of, [25-02] betting, [25-16] distinguished from other contracts, [25-01] ex facie, [25-21] gaming, [25-16] generally, [25-01]–[25-06], [25-07]– [25-10]
law inconsistencies in, [25-02] uncertainty of, [25-02] nature of, [25-01] performance of, [27-15]–[27-17], [27-23] prohibited by statute, [25-07]–[25-15] commission of offence and, [25-09] consequences, [25-14], [25-15] express provisions, [25-11]–[25-12] permission, [25-12] prohibition, [25-11] illegal as formed, where, [25-10] illegal performance, where, [25-10] implied, [25-13]–[25-15] difficulties of, [25-12] object of statute, from, [25-13] penalty, from, [25-14] protection of public, [25-13] public policy and, [25-19] reasonableness of, [25-15] securing the revenue, [25-13] intention and legislature, of, [25-07] parties, of, [25-07] meaning of ‘statute’, [25-08] prosecution, to stifle, [25-28], [27-18] rescission of, [27-16]–[27-18]
restitution and, [27-27]–[27-28] severance in, [27-37] void by statute, [25-16] credit legislation, [25-17] particular provisions only, [25-17] third person, against,[25-18] wagering, [25-16] wrongs, commission of, [25-21]–[25-23] Illegality see also Illegal Contracts; Public Policy; Severance breach and, [33-21] common law see Public Policy contract to commit, [25-04] effects of cause of action, independent, [27-01], [27-21]–[27-28] bailment, [27-21], [27-23], [27-24] basis of, and, [27-04] Bowmakers principle, [27-21]– [27-24] conversion, [27-21], [27-23] detinue, [27-24] goods, sale of, [27-21], [27-22], [27-23], [27-25] hire-purchase contract, [27-21], [27-23] property, recovery of, [27-21] restitution as, [27-27]–[27-28] trespass, [27-22] contract, on, [27-01] damages claims, on, [27-06] debt claim for, on, [27-06]
equitable relief, on, [27-08], [27-13], [27-14], [27-16], [27-19] ex turpi maxim and, [27-05]–[27-09] application of, [27-05] damages, claim for, [27-06] equitable remedies, [27-08] estoppel and, [27-09] meaning of, [27-05] money, recovery of, [27-07] pleading and, [27-05] property, recovery of, [27-07] status of contract and, [27-05] execution of contract and, [27-04] fault and, [27-10]–[27-20] generally, [27-10] generally, [27-01]–[27-04] goods, sale of, on, [27-21] in pari delicto maxim, [27-10] exceptions to, [27-11]–[27-20] knowledge, absence of, [27-11] oppression, [27-12] duress, [27-12] fiduciary relationship, [27-14] fraud, [27-12] mistake, [27-13] statutory, [27-20] protection of public and, [27-19], [27-20] repentance from illegality and, [27-18]
motive for, [27-18] statutory illegality and, [27-18] knowledge of parties and, [27-04] money, recovery of, on, [27-07], [27-15], [27-20], [27-27], [27-28] performance of contract and, [27-01], [27-15]–[27-18] frustration of purpose, [27-15] in pari delicto maxim and, [27-15] partial, [27-16] purpose not carried out, [27-15] policy considerations and, [27-03], [27-04] prohibition of contract and, [27-03] property, recovery of, on, [27-07], [27-15], [27-19], [27-21] goods, in relation to, [27-21]–[27-24] land, in relation to, [27-21] property, transfer of, on, [27-21], [27-22], [27-24], [27-25] Bowmakers principle and, [27-23] collateral contract, [27-26] restitution, [27-27]–[27-28] money paid, of, [27-27], [27-28] quantum meruit claim, [27-28] statute, based on, [27-25] remedies, on, [27-01], [27-02] rights, on, [27-01] source of illegality, and, [27-04], [27-16], [27-18] stakeholder, payment to, [27-17] status of contract and, [27-04] wagering contract, [25-16]
enforcement of contract, where, [27-02] evidence of, [25-03] frustration and, [33-29], [34-04] intention and, [25-04] law, uncertainty of, [27-02], [27-04] penalties for, [27-03] pleading of, [25-03], [27-05] rules governing, [25-03]–[25-06] scope of, [33-22] statutory, [25-05], [25-07]–[25-18] severance and, [27-32], [27-37] supervening see Frustration terminology of, [27-02] Impossibility see Frustration Infants see Minors Inflation see Damages Injunction, [40-01]–[40-08] breach, to restrain, damages, inadequacy of, and, [40-06] discretion and, [40-04] employment contract, in, [40-08] generally, [40-03] negative duty, [40-07] positive duty, [40-07] specific performance and, [40-05], [40-08] co-operation in performance and, [37-22] damages and, [36-25]–[36-28]
final, [40-02] forfeiture, relief against, and, [31-13] generally, [40-01]–[40-08] illegality of contract and, [27-08] interlocutory, [40-02] Mareva, [40-02] performance, late, and, [29-09] prohibitory, [40-02] quia timet, [40-02] remedy of, [40-01] termination of contract and, [32-05] third party, against, [40-08] types of, [40-02] Innominate Term see Intermediate Term Intention to Create Legal Relations advertising puff and, [8-07] agreement and, [8-12] commercial agreements, in, [8-05]–[8-08] consideration and, [6-06], [8-06], [8-12] discretion as to performance, [8-11] distinctions, relevant, [8-08], [8-12] domestic agreements, in, [8-03]–[8-04] essential to contract, [8-01] exclusion of, [8-06] express, [8-02] family agreements, in, [8-03]–[8-04] governmental schemes, [8-09]
‘honour’ clauses and, [8-06] implied, [8-02] onus of proof, [8-05] public policy and, [25-26] social agreements, and, [8-03]–[8-04] voluntary associations, rules of, and, [8-10] Intermediate Term breach of, termination for, see Termination condition/warranty distinction and, [13-08] criticism, [13-15] definition, [13-09] goods, sale of, in, [13-13] innominate term as, [13-09] origin of, [13-08] right to terminate and, [13-08] seaworthiness term as, [13-08] Interpretation see Construction Intoxication see Mental Disability Liquidated Damages clause for, purpose of, [37-07] extravagant, [37-12] forfeiture, relief against, and, [37-10], [37-17] hire, contract of, in, [37-16], [37-17] money, failure to pay, for, [37-13] penalty, as, [37-11] penalty, distinguished from, [37-07]–[37-09], [37-12]–[37-17]
acceleration clause and, [37-17] basis for, [37-08] breach, payable on, [37-16], [37-17], [37-24] construction and, [37-08] contractual rights and, [37-16] description by parties, [37-09] factors relevant to, [37-12]–[37-15] defendant’s obligation, [37-13] estimating loss, difficulty of, [37-15] payment, size of, [37-12] scope of clause, [37-13] forfeiture and, [37-17] onus of proof, [37-08] out of all proportion test, [37-12] ‘present debt’ and, [37-17] presumption of, [37-14] scope of, [37-16]–[37-17] time for, [37-08] pre-estimates, as, [37-07] purpose of, [13-24] recovery of, [37-07]–[37-17] statute and, [37-08] termination and, [32-09], [37-10], [37-17] acceleration clause, where, [37-17] effect of, [37-10] Liquidated Sum see also Agreed Sum; Debt; Liquidated Damages; Price claims for, [37-03]–[37-06]
entire contracts, [37-05] illustrations, [37-04] instalment contracts, [37-06] nature of, [37-03] debt, as, [37-02] deposit as, [37-36] election to continue performance, recovery after, [37-18]–[37-24] frustration and, [37-27] generally, [37-01]–[37-07] mitigation and, [35-37] frustration, recovery after, [34-09], [37-25], [37-27] rescission and, [37-25] restitution and, [37-02], [37-37] restrictions on recovery of, [37-07], [37-38]–[37-41] deposits and, [37-39] election to continue performance, and, [37-21]–[37-24] failure of consideration as, [37-38] forfeiture, relief against, as, [37-39], [37-40] part payments and, [37-40] statute as, [37-41] termination, recovery after, [37-10], [37-25]–[37-41] see also Termination accrued right to, [37-25] breach, for, [37-28]–[37-37] breach, party in, and, [37-30] consideration, failure of, and, [37-29], [37-38] contractual right and, [37-29] frustration, by, [37-27]
generally, [37-25]–[37-27] intention and, [37-28] performance and, [37-28], [37-29] repudiation, for, [37-28]–[37-37] time of, [37-02], [37-26] White and Carter case, and, [37-20], [37-21], [37-23], [37-24] Lump Sum Contract see Entire Contracts Maintenance bare right to action, assignment of, as, [25-29] champerty, [25-30] definition, [25-29] modern approach to, [25-29] proprietary interest and, [25-29] public policy, and, [25-29]–[25-30] solicitors, position of, [25-30] Married Women anti-discrimination legislation, [15-63] capacity to contract, [15-63] common law, at, [15-63] equity, in, [15-63] legislation, [15-63] restraints on anticipation, [15-63] Mental Disability, [15-36]–[15-45] awareness of other party, [15-38] contracts void or voidable, [15-39] equitable approach, [15-42]
executed and executory contracts, [15-40] necessaries, [15-44] mind, extent of effect on, [15-37] non est factum, [15-39] onus of proof, [15-45] ratification, [15-43] ‘unfair’ contracts, [15-41] Minors contracts not for necessaries, [15-16]–[15-25] effect of repudiation, [15-20]–[15-21] adult, on, [15-21] minor, on, [15-20] fraud by minor and, [15-22] guarantees of obligations, [15-25] repudiation of, [15-19] statute and [15-23] tort, liability in, and, [15-24] voidable, [15-16]–[15-18] binding unless repudiated, [15-17] not binding unless affirmed, [15-18] contracts, classification of, [15-05] contractual capacity of, [15-04] ‘degrees’ of minority, [15-07] fraud of minor, [15-22] guarantees of obligations, [15-25] incapacity, duration of, [15-06] majority, age of, [15-02]–[15-03]
necessaries, contracts for, [15-09]– [15-15] beneficial contracts, [15-12] benefit overall, [15-13] concept of, [15-10] employment, [15-11] executory, contracts for, [15-15] generally, [15-09] loans for, [15-14] services as, [15-11] trading contracts, [15-12] New South Wales statute, [15-26]– [15-35] adjustment where presumptively binding, [15-33] affirmation, [15-30] background, [15-26] beneficial contracts, [15-28] certificates under, [15-34] ‘civil acts’, [15-27] grant of capacity, [15-29] ‘presumptively binding’, [15-27] repudiation, [15-31] adjustment on, [15-32]–[15-34] tort, liability in, [15-35] privilege, personal, [15-08] statutory modification, [15-23] tort, liability in, [15-24] Misleading or Deceptive Conduct see also Misrepresentation Australian Consumer Law, [19-01], [19-02]
damages for, [19-13], [19-15] general law, compared with damages and, [19-13] rescission and, [19-16], [19-17] generally, [19-01], [19-03]–[19-04] application of, [19-03]–[19-04] consumers and, [19-06] impact of, [19-11] misrepresentation and, [19-01], [19-04], [19-07], [19-08], [19-10], [19-15], [19-11]-[19-17], [19-19] prohibition of, [19-01]–[19-10] breach of contract and, [19-09] Competition and Consumer Act, [19-02] conduct prohibited, [19-02] consumers and, [19-07] fair trading legislation, [19-03] financial services, [19-03] generally, [19-01] literal truth and, [19-07] ‘misleading or deceptive’, [19-05] new law, [19-02] opinions and, [19-08] overall impression and, [19-07] predictions and, [19-08] promises and, [19-08] provisions, relevant, [19-02], [19-03] puffery and, [19-07]
silence and, [19-10] trade or commerce, in, required, [19-04] Trade Practices Act, [19-01], [19-02] remedies for, [19-11]–[19-17] damages, right to, [19-13], [19-15] measure of, [19-14] discretionary orders, [19-16] limitation on, [19-17] generally, [19-11] injunctions, [19-12] limitation periods, [19-14] persons involved, [19-15], [19-16] reliance and, [19-13] Misrepresentation see also Misleading or Deceptive Conduct acknowledgment clause and, [19-20] collateral contract, and, [18-01] common law and equity contrasted, [18-03], [18-37] damages for, [18-63]–[18-78] common law, at, [18-66]–[18-72] affirmation, assessment after, [18-71] causation and, [18-68] cause of action, accrual of, [18-67] damage, proof of, [18-66] market value, relevance of, [18-70] measure of, [18-69] remoteness and, [18-68] rescission, assessment after, [18-72]
warranty, breach of, and, [18-69] generally, [18-63]–[18-65] deceit, remedy for, [18-63] equity, and, [18-37], [18-65] rescission and, [18-64] statute, under, [18-73]–[18-78] see also Misleading or Deceptive Conduct generally, [18-73] definition, [18-02] disclaimer clause and, [19-18] elements of, [18-06]–[18-24] false and factual, [18-06]–[18-18] advertising puff, [18-06] circumstances, change in, [18-17] concealment, fraudulent, [18-18] fact, question of, [18-13] generally, [18-06]–[18-07] intention, statement of and, [18-09] law, statement of, and, [18-10]– [18-12] non-disclosure and, [18-14] duty to disclose, [18-15] opinion, statement of and, [18-09] partially true statement, [18-16] promise, not, [18-08] representor's mind, state of, and [18-26] silence and, [18-13]–[18-18] materiality, [18-23]–[18-24]
relevance of, [18-23] requirement of, [18-23] reliance by representee, [18-19]– [18-22] fact, question of, [18-20] intention of representor and, [18-19] knowledge and, [18-22] proof, burden of, [18-21] verify, opportunity to, and, [18-22] exclusion of liability for, [14-19], [19-19] see also Exclusion Clause fraudulent, [18-23], [18-25]–[18-28] concept of, [18-25] damages for, [18-66]–[18-72] deceit, tort of, [18-77] intention and, [18-27] motive and, [18-27] pleading of, [18-28] proof of, [18-28] representor’s mind, state of, [18-26] generally, [18-01]–[18-05] innocent, [18-23], [18-37]–[18-38] approach to, [18-38] generally, [18-37] law, of, [18-10]–[18-12] fraud, as, [18-12] private rights, [18-11] rule applicable to, [18-10] status of person, [18-11]
legislation and, [18-74]–[18-78], [19-01]–[19-20] Australian Capital Territory and South Australia, in, [18-74]–[18-78] application of, [18-74] damages under, [18-75]–[18-78] defences to, [18-78] measure of, [18-77] nature of, [18-77] rescission, in lieu of, [18-75] right to, [18-76] exclusion clauses and, [19-19] generally, [18-74], [19-17] damages and, [18-74]–[18-78], [19-13] goods, sale of, [18-60]–[18-62], see also Sale of Goods misleading or deceptive conduct see Misleading or Deceptive Conduct merger clause and, [19-20] misleading or deceptive conduct, as, see Misleading or Deceptive Conduct mistake and, [20-16] negligent, [18-29]–[18-36] damages, measure of, [18-65] duty of care, [18-29] elements of, [18-29] fiduciary relationship, where, [18-32] foreseeability and, [18-31] Hedley Byrne principle, [18-30] pre-contract misrepresentation as, [18-33] reliance, and, [18-34], [18-35] representation as term, [18-36]
special relationship, where, [18-32] rescission for, [18-39]–[18-62], [19-16], [19-17], see also Rescission specific performance and, [39-12] types of, [18-04] writing, when required, [18-05] Mistake approaches to, [20-05]–[20-09] common law, at, [20-06] equity, in, [20-07] generally, [20-05] common, [20-14]–[20-32] generally, [20-14] nature of, [20-02] rescission for, [20-26]–[20-32] equitable fraud and, [20-31] fault and, [20-32] fundamental, [20-30] innocent misrepresentation and, [20-06] justification of, [20-28] modern reformulation, [20-29] origins of, [20-27] rectification for, [20-07], see also Rectification specific performance, refusal of, [39-11] unconscionability and, [20-31] voidness by, [20-15]–[20-25] failure of consideration and, [20-15] negligence, and, [20-17]
reliance on, [20-20] subject matter, quality of, [20-21]–[20-25] Bell v Lever Bros and, [20-22], [20-24] ‘chance’, where, [20-19] failure of consideration and, [20-15] generally, [20-21] identification of, [20-23] motive and, [20-25] subject matter, absence of, [20-15]–[20-20] goods, [20-16], [20-17] land, [20-18] partial, [20-19] void/voidable distinction, [20-26] factual, [20-09] frustration, and, [20-10], [33-55] generally, [20-01] law, of, [20-09] misrepresentation, and, [20-11] mutual, [20-33]–[20-37] nature of, [20-03] rescission for, [20-36]–[20-37] equitable relief for, [20-37] generally, [20-36] specific performance, refusal of, [20-35] voidness by, [20-33]–[20-35] illustrations, [20-34] legal effect as to, [20-35]
offer and acceptance and, [20-33] non est factum, [21-12]–[21-20], see also Non Est Factum objective theory of contract and, [20-13] rectification for, [21-01]–[21-11], see also Rectification remedies for, [20-08] specific performance and, [20-07], [20-37], [39-11] types of, [20-02]–[20-04] unilateral mistake, [20-38]–[20-54] generally, [20-38]–[20-39] mutual mistake and, [20-39] nature of, [20-03] rescission for, [20-52]–[20-54] generally, [20-52] knowledge and, [20-53] unconscionable conduct and, [20-54] voidness by, [20-40]–[20-51] identity of party, as to, [20-40]– [20-48] Australian cases, [20-47] aversion to dealing with, [20-42] characteristics and, [20-44] distance, at, [20-40]–[20-43] face to face where, [20-44]– [20-48] generally, [20-40], [20-44] illustrations, [20-45], [20-46] non-existent party, [20-43] offer, acceptance of, and, [20-41] principle, search for, [20-48]
self-styled agent, [20-42] terms, as to, [20-49]–[20-51] generally, [20-49] Smith v Hughes and, [20-50] ‘snapping’ at offer, [20-51] warranty, and, [20-12] Money legal tender, [28-15] payment of, [28-16] tender of, [28-15] Negligence see also Tort exclusion clause, and, [14-16]–[14-17], see also Exclusion Clause Negotiable Instruments see Bill of Exchange Non Est Factum, [21-12]–[21-20] blanks, filling in, [21-20] carelessness and, [21-18] character/contents distinction and, [21-17] document void, [21-01] effect of, [21-01] generally, [21-12] history, [21-14] mental incapacity and, [15-39], [21-13] proof of, [21-16] Saunders v Anglia Building Society and, [21-15] third party absent, [21-19] undue influence, and, [23-15]
Offer and Acceptance acceptance, [3-18]–[3-41] additional terms, [3-22] alternative offers and, [3-21] communication of, [3-26], [3-27] correspondence with offer, [3-19] counter-offer, [3-19], [3-20], [3-21] different terms, [3-22] inertia selling, [3-28] instantaneous communication and, [3-38] knowledge of offer and necessity of, [3-39] sufficiency of, [3-40] method of, [3-28] necessity of, [3-18] offeree, must be by, [3-25] postal rule, [3-30]–[3-37] application of, [3-31] displacement of, [3-32] intermediate situations, [3-34] justifications for, [3-35] ‘lost in post’, [3-33] ‘ordinary course of post’, [3-34] place of contracting, [3-36], [3-38] time of contracting, [3-37] withdrawal by post, [3-37] qualified, [3-22]
reward cases, in, [3-41] silence as, [3-29] tenders, of, [3-23] unequivocal, [3-20] withdrawal by post, [3-37] agreement, traditional test of, [3-02] ‘battle of forms’, [3-24] email by, [3-38] fax by, [3-38] limitations on, [3-03] negotiations, lengthy, [3-04] offer, [3-07]–[3-17], [3-42]–[3-57] advertisement as, [3-08] alternatives, of, [3-21] auction sale, [3-11] bait advertising, [3-15] communication of, [3-17] debenture or shares for, [3-10] definition, [3-07] duration of, [3-42]–[3-57] conditional offer, [3-56] death of offeror/offeree, [3-57] lapse of time and, [3-54]–[3-55] rejection and, [3-51]–[3-53] revocation of, [3-43]–[3-50] intent, statements of, and, [3-07] invitation to treat, [3-08]–[3-15]
land, sale of, [3-09] lapse of, [3-54]–[3-55] period of offer indefinite, [3-55] period of offer stated, [3-54] price, statement of, [3-09] price lists, and, [3-08] prospectus, [3-10] public, to, [3-16] revocation of, [3-46] ‘puff’, [3-08] rejection of, [3-51]–[3-53] revocable, [3-23] revocation of, [3-43]–[3-50] communication of, [3-44] multiple offer, [3-45] option contracts, [3-47] postal rule inapplicable, [3-44] public offer, [3-46] unilateral contract, in, [3-49], [3-50] self-service stores, [3-13] shares or debentures, [3-10] standing, [3-23] statutory offences and, [3-14] tenders as, [3-13] traditional test, as, [3-02]–[3-06] Option Contracts deposit required by, [37-37]
enforcement of, [28-37] exercise, time of, [29-12] forfeiture of, [31-13] statute and, [31-14] frustration of, [33-32] juristic nature, [3-48] leases, in, [28-37] performance of, [28-37] privilege, species of, as, [29-12] revocation of offer, [3-47] Penalty see Liquidated Damages Performance, [28-01]–[28-40], see also Entire Contract aleatory contract, of, [28-38] apportionment of statute, by, [28-27] terms of contract, by, [28-22], [28-25] bad faith, in, [29-02] bill of exchange, acceptance of, as, [28-16] consideration meaning, [27-36] contract price, entitlement to, [28-19]–[28-38] aleatory contract, [28-38] entire contracts, [28-22]–[28-24] nature of claim and, [28-20] option contract, [28-37] severable contracts, [28-25]–[28-26] unilateral contract, [28-36]
co-operation in, [28-09], [37-21]–[37-22] defective see Breach delay in damages for, [36-06]–[36-07] generally, [29-07]–[29-12], see also Breach demand for, [28-14] discharge by, [28-12]–[28-18] enforcement of contract and, [28-19] exact performance required, [28-12] generally, [28-12]–[28-13] substantial performance, by, [28-13] frustration and, [33-15], [34-17] illegal contract, of, [27-15], [27-18], [27-23], [27-25] impossibility of see Frustration interruption in, [33-39] issues, [28-01] late see Breach method of, [28-14]–[28-18] alternative, [28-17] damages and, [36-18] express provision, [28-18] frustration and, [33-16] skill, and, [28-18] third party, by, [28-18] vicarious, [28-18] order of, [28-05]–[28-11] concurrent, [28-08]
construction, depends on, [28-02] co-operation and, [28-09] dependent obligations, [28-05], [28-07], [28-08] good faith and, [28-09] goods, sale of, in, [28-07]–[28-08] history, [28-06] independent obligations, [28-05], [28-06] plea of, implied, [28-11] presumption of, [28-08] prevention of performance and, [28-10] partial, restitution see also Restitution payment, by, [28-16] prevention of, [28-10], [37-02] refusal of, [28-06], [28-39], [30-37]– [30-38] repudiation and, [30-39] substantial see also Entire Contracts doctrine of, [28-30]–[28-32], [28-34] unilateral contract and, [28-36] suspension of, [28-06], [28-39], [34-05] tender of, [28-15] termination of, [28-40], [37-28], see also Termination time of, [28-03]–[28-04] construction, depends on, [28-02] demand, when required, [28-14] express provision, [28-03] reasonable, [28-04] tender of performance and, [28-15]
withholding of, [28-39] Plurality of Parties, [16-28]–[16-31] consideration by, [6-22], [16-28], [16-31] co-promisees concept, [16-28] consideration moving from one, [16-31] joint, [6-22], [16-30], [16-31] joint and several, [16-30] several, [16-30], [16-31] co-promisors concept, [16-28] discharge of, [16-29] joint, [16-29] joint and several, [16-29] several, [16-29] generally, [16-28] intention and, [16-29] release of, [16-28] Price conditional payment, as, [37-38] reasonable, [38-07], [38-18] recovery of, [28-09], [28-20]–[28-34] acceleration of, [37-06] damages and, [35-10] election, after, [37-20]–[37-24] co-operation and, [37-21]–[37-22] frustration, after, [34-09]
goods, sale of, in, [37-04], [37-06], [37-21] instalments, [37-06], [37-34] property, passing of, and, [37-04], [37-21], [37-31] land, sale of, in, [28-08], [37-35] nature of contract and, [28-20] piecemeal, [37-06] termination and, [28-21], [37-06], see also Termination Privity of Contract, [16-01]–[16-27] assignment of rights and, [16-09], see also Assignment benefit third parties, attempts to, [16-10]–[16-13] damages, [16-12], [16-13] enforcement by, [16-12], [16-13] generally, [16-10] performance of contract and, [16-11] remedies in favour of, [16-12], [16-13] specific performance and, [16-12] variation of contract and, [16-11] burden third parties, attempts to, [16-14] estate, privity of, [16-14] goods, and, [16-14] collateral contract, and, [10-14] doctrine, [16-01]–[16-09] exceptions to, [16-05]–[16-09] agency, [16-06] assignment and, [16-09] generally, [16-05] privity of estate, [16-08]
trusteeship, [16-07] exclusion clauses and, [14-20], [16-24]–[16-27] agency, [16-25] carriage of goods, [16-24]–[16-27] consideration and, [16-26] vicarious immunity and, [16-24] future of, [16-18]–[16-23] conclusion on, [16-23] history of, [16-03] illustrations, [16-04] legislation, [16-15]–[16-17] consumers, in favour of, [16-17] insurance contracts, [16-17] manufacturers’ liability, [16-17] motor vehicle insurance, [16-17] property interest, [16-15] reform of, [16-15]–[16-17] recommendation, [16-16] rule, [16-01] Trident case, and conclusion on, [16-23] contractual action, [16-19] decision, [16-18] dissenting judgments, [16-22] impact of, [16-02], [16-23] trust device, and, [16-20] unjust enrichment and, [16-21]
Promise condition precedent and, [13-18] condition subsequent and, [13-18] contingency, distinguished from, [13-16]–[13-19] basis for, [13-16] confusion between, [13-19] similarity between, [13-17] Promissory Estoppel see Estoppel Public Policy changing face of, [25-20], [25-32] concept of, [25-19] effect of, [25-19], see also Illegality English decisions, application of, [25-19] frustration and, [33-41] generally, [25-19]–[25-20] heads of, [25-20] illegality and, [25-06] impact of, [25-06] infringement of, [25-21]–[25-33], [26-01]–[26-20] administration of justice, prejudice to, [25-28]–[25-30] champerty, [25-30] maintenance, [25-29] private rights and, [25-28] public interest and, [25-28] stifling prosecution, [25-28] corruption in public life, by, [25-24] foreign relations, injury to, by, [25-25]
immoral contract, by, [25-31]–[25-32] current approach to, [25-32] illicit cohabitation, for, [25-32] sexual immorality, limited to, [25-31] sexual services, for, [25-32] statute and, [25-32] marriage, status of, contract prejudicial to, [25-33] ouster of courts’ jurisdiction, by, [25-26]–[25-27] arbitration clause and, [25-26] certificate of third person, and, [25-26] common law jurisdiction, [25-26] compromise of dispute, and, [25-26] ‘honour’ clause, [25-26] maintenance agreement, [25-27] private right, where, [25-27] public right, where, [25-27] statutory jurisdiction, [25-27] unincorporated association, [25-26] restraint of trade, by, see Restraint of Trade separation agreement, and, [25-32], [25-33] trading with the enemy, by, [25-25] wrong, commission of, by, [25-21]– [25-23] common law, [25-21] crime, contract to commit, [25-23] ex facie illegality and, [25-22] intent, requirement of, [25-21] intention of one party, [25-22]
knowledge of law and, [25-21] statutory, [25-21] minor offence, where, [25-23] tort, contract to commit, [25-23] maintenance agreement, and, [25-27] relevant, [25-19] restraint of trade, [25-19], see also Restraint of Trade termination of contract and, [32-08], [32-10], [32-11] test of, [25-19] void or unenforceable, [25-29], [26-03] Quasi-contract see Restitution Rectification, [21-01]–[21-11] agreement, nature of, and, [21-04]– [21-06] content, must be as to, [21-06] continuing intention, [21-04] document as whole agreement, [21-05] enforceable, need not be, [21-06] bars to, [21-03] common mistake, where, [21-01] documents, concern with, [21-01] evidence of, [12-22] generally, [21-01]–[21-03] bars to, [21-03] concept, [21-02] dangers of, [21-02] effect of, [21-01]
instruments, correction of, [21-01] illegality and, [27-08] intention and, [21-07]–[21-08] common, [21-04] proof of, [21-07]–[21-08] manifestation of, [21-08] standard of, [21-07] scope of, [21-01] unilateral mistake, where, [21-09]– [21-11] equitable fraud, [21-10] knowledge and, [21-09] rescission and, [21-11] Repudiation see also Breach; Termination doctrine of ‘acceptance’ and, [30-45] basis for, [30-33] scope of, [30-36] frustration and, [30-45] retraction of, [30-33], [30-46] termination for, [30-28]–[30-47] Rescission breach, for, no, [30-04] discharge of duties and, [32-01] duress for, [22-03], [22-25] equitable right of, [30-04] frustration and, [34-06], [34-11] illegal contract, of, [27-16]–[27-18]
liquidated sum recovery of, and, [37-25] misrepresentation, for, [18-39]–[18-62], see also Misrepresentation damages and, [18-02] effect of, [18-41] elements of, [18-39]–[18-40] generally, [18-39] unequivocal conduct as, [18-40] frustration and, [34-06] statute and, [19-16], [19-17] mistake, for see also Mistake frustration and, [34-06] restrictions on, [20-55] restitution and, [38-22] restrictions on, [18-42]–[18-62] affirmation as, [18-47]–[18-51] conduct and, [18-49] delay and, [18-50] duress, where, [22-27] generally, [18-47] knowledge and, [18-48] scope of, [18-51] execution of contract, as, [18-54]–[18-56] fraud, where, [18-55] Seddon's case, rule in, [18-54], [18-55] statute and, [18-56] generally, [18-42] goods, sale of, in, [18-60]–[18-62], see also Sale of Goods
mistake, where, [20-55] representation, incorporation as term, [18-57]–[18-59] amendment, statute, by, [18-59] fraud, where, [18-58] generally, [18-57] restitutio in integrum as, [18-43]–[18-46] common law and equity contrasted, [18-44] illustrations, [18-46] process of, [18-43] rule for, [18-45] third parties’ rights, [18-52]–[18-53] generally, [18-52] illustration, [18-53] types of, [18-42] termination and, [31-15], [31-16], [32-04] terminology of, [32-04] Restitution action, forms of, and, [38-01], [38-08] adjustment issues, [38-35]–[38-39] damages and, [38-36], [38-39] generally, [38-35] restitutio in integrum, [38-06], [38-13], [38-36] claims for, [38-02]–[38-09] contract, relevance of, [38-03] generally, [38-02] statutory, [38-04] consideration, failure of, as basis for, [27-28], [37-38], [38-06]
discharged contract, [38-21], [38-24] frustration where, [34-11] illegality and, [27-28] intention and, [38-33] mistake and, [20-15] total, must be, [34-11], [38-06] contract law, relevance of, [38-03] damages and, [35-12] debt and, [38-01], [38-05], [38-07] deposit, of, [38-33], [38-34] discharge of contract, and, [32-07], [34-11], [38-01], [38-36] duress for, [22-12], [22-13], [22-28] forfeiture, relief against, as, [38-31]–[38-33], [38-34] deposits and, [38-33] land, sale of, in, [38-32] relevance of, [38-31] statute, under, [38-34] frustration after, [34-10]–[34-42], see also Frustration generally, [38-01] illegality, where, [27-07], [27-15], [27-16], [27-27]–[27-28] implied contract and, [38-01], [38-07] implied term and, [38-07] ineffective contract, in, [9-20], [38-03], [38-05], [38-06], [38-07], [38-14] inherently ineffective contract, in, [38-16]–[38-19] failure to materialise, [38-17] generally, [38-16] goods and, [38-18]
money, recovery of, [38-18] services rendered under, [38-17], [38-18] unenforceable, [38-19] void, [38-18] justice and, [38-01] liquidated sum and, [37-02], [37-37] nature of, [38-02] partially performed contract, under, [38-20]–[38-25] benefit, absence of, and, [38-23] breach and, [38-21]–[38-25] defendant, by, [38-24]–[38-25] plaintiff, by, [38-21]–[38-23] entire contracts and, [28-24] frustration and, [34-10], [34-11], [38-04], [38-06] generally, [38-20] illegality and, [27-28] quantum meruit claim, [38-05], [38-22], [38-23], [38-25], [38-39] quasi-contract and, [38-05]–[38-07] common counts, [38-05] consideration, total failure of, and, [38-06] indebitatus assumpsit, based on, [38-01], [38-07] quantum meruit, [38-07] quantum valebat, [34-10], [38-07] reliance and, [38-15] rescission of contract and, [32-07], [34-11], [38-06], [38-36] statute, based on, [38-04], [38-34] frustrated contracts legislation, [34-13]–[34-42], see also Frustration
substantial, [38-36] unjust enrichment, based on, [38-01], [38-08]–[38-09], see also Unjust Enrichment valuation issues, [38-35]–[38-39] adjustment and, [38-36] basis for, [38-35] contract price, relevance of, [38-37]–[38-39] ceiling, as, [38-39] discharged contract, [38-39] evidence, as [38-37] unenforceable contract, [38-38] unprofitable contract and, [38-39] void contract, [38-38] damages and, [38-36], [38-39] generally, [38-35] price, reasonable, and, [38-07], [38-18] time for, [38-35] wrong, for, [38-27]–[38-29] breach of contract as, [38-29] fiduciary duty and, [38-28] tort, waiver of, [38-27] Restraint of Trade Competition and Consumer Act and, [26-21]–[26-23] Australian Consumer Law and, [26-21], [26-23] common law, contrast with, [26-22] contravention of, [26-23] generally, [26-21]
remedies under, [26-23] ‘unfair practices’ and, [26-21] covenantee, meaning of, [26-01] covenantor, meaning of, [26-01] definition, [26-01] doctrine personal restraints, not limited to, [26-05] scope of, [26-04], [26-05] enforceability of, [26-03] examples, [26-01] exclusive service contract, where, [26-04] existence of, [26-04]–[26-05] generally, [26-01]–[26-08] basic questions, [26-02]–[26-05] justification of, [26-03] accepted standards and, [26-05] business, sale of, in, [26-03], [26-09], [26-11], [26-14] commercial contract, in, [26-19] employment contract, in, [26-03], [26-10], [26-15] illustrations, [26-16] exclusive dealing contract, in, [26-19] exclusive service contract, in, [26-20] fiduciary relationship, where, [26-18] nature of contract and, [26-03] onus of proof, [26-06] partnership deed, in, [26-17], [26-18] business, sale of, compared with, [26-17], [26-18]
generally, [26-17] solicitors, between, [26-18] protectable interests, [26-09] confidential information, [26-09] economies of trade, [26-09], [26-20] goodwill, [26-09], [26-14] property, not limited to, [26-09] trade secrets, [26-09] public interest and, [26-03], [26-07], [26-18], [26-22] reasonableness, [26-06]–[26-13] advantage to individual and, [26-07], [26-18] construction of contract and, [26-16] economic theory and, [26-11] generally, [26-06]-[26-08] intention and, [26-08] particular contracts, in, [26-14]– [26-20] relevant factors, [26-09]–[26-13] bargaining position, [26-13] benefits to parties, [26-11] consideration, quantum of, [26-11], [26-18] duration of restraint, [26-10], [26-14], [26-18] unlimited, [26-10] employment contract, in, [26-15] interest of covenantee, [26-09] restraint, scope of, [26-10], [26-14], [26-16], [26-17], [26-18] world-wide, where, [26-14] termination of contract and, [26-10]
unconscionability, [26-12] time to consider, [26-08] two questions, [26-07] unfair bargain, where, [26-20] ‘solus’ agreement, in, [26-19] land, contracts involving, [26-05] non-contractual, [26-01] popular sense of, [26-01] practical working of contract and, [26-04] pre-existing freedom, need for, [26-04] prima facie rule, [26-02] safety standards and, [26-23] severance, [27-31], [27-33], [27-34], [27-35], [27-37], [27-38]–[27-39] statutory, [27-38]-[27-39] statutory control of, [26-21] statutory penalty for, [26-23] termination of contract and, [32-10] void or unenforceable, [26-03] Sale of Goods see also Damages implied terms in, [11-18]–[11-22] misrepresentation and, [18-60]–[18-62] equitable rules and, [18-61] goods, acceptance of, and, [18-62] issues, [18-60] mistake and, [20-16] repudiation of, [30-38]
Severance associated transaction, of, [27-32]– [27-33] illegal contract, [27-32] restraint of trade, contract in, [27-31], [27-33], [27-34], [27-35] bailment contract, in, [27-37] common law, at, [27-32]–[27-37] defects of, [27-38] court, powers of, [27-34] ‘blue pencil’ test, [27-35] deed, [27-31], [27-39] factors relevant to, [27-31] forms of, [27-29] generally, [27-29]–[27-31] illegality and, [27-29]–[27-39] intention and, [27-30], [27-35] lease of land, and, [27-33] public policy and, [27-37] restraint of trade contract, in, [27-37], see also Restraint of Trade scope of contract and, [27-35] statute, under, [27-38]–[27-39] approach to, [27-39] test of, [27-30], [27-35] uncertainty, where, [27-30] within the contract, [27-29], [27-34]– [27-39] illegal contract, [27-37] term, part of, [27-35] term, whole of, [27-36]
Simple Contracts, [6-12] Specialties, [6-06], [6-12] Specific Performance, [39-01]-[39-12] consideration and, [39-06] co-operation in performance and, [37-21] damages, inadequacy of, and, [39-02], [39-04], [39-06] damages and, [36-25]–[36-29] discretion in, [39-03], [39-07]–[39-12], [40-04] breach and, [39-07] delay and, [39-09] hardship and, [39-10] misrepresentation and, [39-12] mistake and, [20-08], [20-35], [39-11] mutuality and, [39-08] readiness and willingness, and, [39-07] unfairness and, [39-10] election and, [31-07], [37-19], [39-09] employment contract, of, [39-03] forfeiture, relief against and, [31-13], [37-40], [39-02] futility of, [39-03] generally, [39-01], [39-02]–[39-03] goods, sale of, [39-05] illegality of contract and, [27-08] impossibility of, [39-03] injunction and, [40-01], [40-05], [40-08] land, sale of, [39-04] money, contract for payment, of, [37-19], [39-06]
option contract, [3-48] performance, late, and, [29-09] ‘proper’, [39-01] proprietary, interest and, [39-04] readiness and willingness and, [37-40] remedy of, [39-01] scope of, [39-03] senses of, [39-01] severable contract, of, [39-03] supervision and, [39-03] termination of contract and, [32-05], [39-02] Statute of Frauds see Contracts Requiring Written Evidence Taxation see Damages Tenders, [3-12], [3-23], see also Offer and Acceptance Termination see also Election; Frustration abandonment, by, [31-12] anticipatory breach, by, [30-30] election, requirement of, [30-30] automatic, [29-19], [31-01] breach and, [31-01] contractual provision for, [31-01] force majeure, where, [31-01] breach, for, [30-09]–[30-27] automatic, not, [29-19] condition, [30-11]–[30-21] contractual right to, [30-09]
generally, [30-01]–[30-10] intermediate term, [30-22]–[30-27] partially executed contract, [30-66] statutory right to, [30-10] condition, breach of, for, [30-11]–[30-21] agreement for, [30-12]–[30-19] cases, prior, and, [30-14] contractual right and, [30-12] express, [30-12] implied, [30-13]–[30-19], [30-21] conduct, subsequent, and, [30-17] consequences of breach, and, [30-17] contract, nature of, and, [30-19] contract, structure of, and, [30-16] damages, assessment of, and, [30-18] entry into contract, motivation for, and, [30-15] establishment of, [30-13] negotiations, and, [30-15] parol evidence rule, and, [30-13] result, reasonableness of, and, [30-18] standard form, where, [30-14], [30-19] statutory classification, [30-20] subject matter, nature of, and, [30-19] term, structure of, and, [30-16], [30-19] test of, [30-15], [30-17], [30-19] implied term, [30-20]–[30-21] consequences of
anticipatory breach and, [30-33] breach, for, [32-01]–[32-11] frustration and, [34-02], [34-03], [34-06], [34-09], [34-11] damages, on, [34-07] deposit, recovery of, on, [37-36]–[37-37], see also Deposit discharge as, [32-01]–[32-03] duties, of, [32-01], [32-05] extent of, [32-02]–[32-03] finality of, [32-03] forfeiture, relief against, and, [32-03] parties, of, [30-01], [32-01] primary duties, of, [32-01], [32-02], [32-05] ‘rescission’ and, [32-01] retrospective, not, [32-02] scope of, [32-02] secondary duties, of, [32-05] time of, [32-02] instalment payments, recovery of, and, [37-32]–[37-35] charterparty, [37-32] construction contract, [37-33] employment contract, [37-33] goods, sale of, [37-34] hire, contract of, [37-32] hire-purchase, [37-32] land, sale of, [37-35] lease, [37-32] liquidated sum, recovery of, and, [37-25]–[37-41], see also Liquidated
Sum price, recovery of, on, [28-21], [37-31] repudiation, for, [32-01]–[32-11] restitution and, [32-06]–[32-07] rights, on, [32-05] terms, on, [32-08]–[32-11], [34-08] agreed damages clause, [32-09] breach, party in, and, [32-10] construction and, [32-08] exclusion clause, [32-09] primary obligations, [32-09] procedural, [32-09], [32-10] public policy and, [32-08], [32-11] statute and, [32-08], [32-11] substantive, [32-09], [32-10] court, by, [31-07] damages and, [36-13]–[36-17] delay, for, [30-48]–[30-64] consequences of breach and, [30-57]–[30-58] actual, [30-58] criterion for, [30-57] foreseeable, [30-58] forms of, [30-48] generally, [30-48]–[30-49] notice procedure and anticipated, [30-56] breach required for, [30-60], [30-62]
effect of, [30-64] form of notice, [30-61] generally, [30-59] parties bound by, [30-63] readiness and willingness and, [30-62] scope of, [30-62] service, time of, [30-60] unreasonable delay and, [30-55], [30-56], [31-03], [30-61] relevance of, [30-48] time stipulation, breach of classification of, [30-49] agreement for, [30-50]–[30-51] express, [30-50] implied, [30-51] essential, breach of, [30-50]–[30-53] commercial contract, in, [30-51], [30-52] condition as, [30-49] intermediate term, and, [30-52] standard form contract, in, [30-51] express, [30-50]-[30-52] implied, [30-53] intermediate term and, [30-49] non-essential, breach of, [30-54]–[30-56] detriment and, [30-55] disadvantage and, [30-55] frustrating delay, [30-55] generally, [30-54]
loss and, [30-55] nature of contract and, [30-55] unreasonable delay, [30-55] treatment of, [30-49] warranty and, [30-49] employment contract, of, [31-01] exclusion clause, effect on, [14-21] frustration and, [34-02], [34-03], [34-06], [34-09] grounds for, alternative, [31-03] illegal contract, of, [27-21] intermediate term, breach of, for, [30-22]–[30-27] express, [30-22] implied, [30-23] seriousness required for, [30-24]– [30-27] actual, [30-26] agreement on, [30-24]–[30-25] express, [30-24] implied, [30-25] common law, at, [30-25] conduct of parties and, [30-27] foreseeable, [30-27] substantially different performance as, [30-25] justification of, [31-03] performance and, [28-39], [28-40] repudiation, for, [30-28]–[30-47] acceptance as, [30-45]–[30-47] effect, [30-46]
election, as, [30-46] meaning of, [30-45] non-acceptance, [30-47] readiness and willingness and, [30-47] reasons for, [30-45] required for, [30-45] anticipatory breach on, [30-30] basis of, [30-33] bill of exchange, application to, [30-36] concept of, [30-28] condition, breach of, and, [30-34], [30-35] contractual right and, [30-41] exclusion of, [30-36] generally, [30-01]–[30-10], [30-28]–[30-36] good faith and, [2-15] inability, based on, [30-42]–[30-44] actual, [30-43] declared, [30-42] disabling conduct, by, [30-42] inferred, [30-44] inevitable breach, based on, [30-33] instalment goods contract, of, [30-38] intermediate term, breach of, and, [30-34] lease, application to, [30-36] partially executed contract, [30-66] proof of, [30-31] seriousness required for, [30-32]
prospective breach and, [30-32], [30-35] readiness and willingness and, [30-29] retraction of, [30-33] termination for breach, compared with, [30-28] test of, [30-32], [30-35], [30-38] intention and, [30-41] objective, [30-41] theories of, [30-33] unilateral contract, of, [30-65] warranty and, [30-34] wilful, [30-37] words or conduct, based on, [30-37]–[30-41] absoluteness of, and, [30-41] bona fides and, [30-41] construction of contract and, [30-39] refusal to perform as, [30-37]– [30-38] contingent obligation, where, [30-37] express, [30-37] implied, [30-38] termination, wrongful, as, [30-40] rescission and, [31-15], [31-16] confused with, [31-15] distinguished from [30-04] restitution, requirement for, as, [32-07] restrictions on, [31-01]–[31-18] breach as, [31-12] delay as, [31-18]
election and, [31-02]–[31-07] generally, [31-02]–[31-04] election as, [31-05]–[31-07] equitable relief as, [31-07] estoppel as, [31-08]–[31-10], [31-17] factual representation, where, [31-09] promise, where, [31-10] exclusion clause, [31-11] forfeiture, relief against, as, [31-13]–[31-14] jurisdiction, [31-13], [31-14] inherent, [31-13] statutory, [31-14] good faith, as, [2-21]–[2-22], [31-17] ‘fair conduct’ requirement, [31-17] goods, acceptance of, as, [31-15] goods, title to, and, [31-15] permanent, [31-06] reasonableness, as, [31-17] restitutio in integrum as, [31-16] statute as, [31-15], [31-18] unconscionability as, [31-13], [31-17] statute, conferred by, [30-03] right of common law, conferred by, [30-03] contractual, [30-03] express, [30-03] generally, [30-01]–[30-04]
law, issue of, [30-01] nature, [30-01] onus of proof, [30-02] rescission and, [30-04] rights, effect on, [32-04]–[32-05] rescission and, [32-04] types of, [32-05] substantial performance and, [28-32] suspension of performance and, [28-39], [28-40] terminology and, [30-05]–[30-07] anticipatory breach, [30-06] fundamental breach, [30-07] repudiation, [30-06] terms of contract, [30-05] total breach, [30-07] unilateral contracts, of, [30-65] wrongful repudiation as, [30-40] Terms agreed damages clause see Liquidated Damages composite, [13-06] conditions see Condition conditions precedent, [13-18], [28-07], see also Condition Precedent conditions subsequent, [13-18], see also Condition Subsequent penalty, as, [37-08] performance and, [28-02] reasonableness of, [12-04] restitution and, [34-10]–[34-11], [38-01]
construction of see Construction contingencies stated by, [13-12] definitional, [13-21] essential, [13-20] see also Essential Term exclusion clauses see Exclusion Clause frustration and, [33-40]–[33-42] fundamental, [13-20], see also Fundamental Term identification of, [10-02]–[10-19], [11-01]–[11-25] express, [10-02]–[10-19] incorporation of, [10-15]–[10-19] character of document, and, [10-15], [10-17] commercial contract, where, [10-18], [10-19] course of dealing, by, [10-18] effect of misrepresentation, [10-15] good faith and, [2-06] knowledge of terms and, [10-15], [10-17], [10-18] notice, by, [10-16] onerous terms, [10-17] reference, by, [10-19] signature, by, [10-15] ‘ticket’ cases, [10-17] unusual terms, [10-17] pre-contractual statements as, [10-02]–[10-14] classification of, [10-02]–[10-05] puffs, as, [10-03] purpose of, [10-02] representations, as, [10-04]
term, as, [10-05] collateral contracts, as, see Collateral Contract factors relevant to, [10-06]–[10-10] content of statement as, [10-08] expertise as, [10-10] intention as, [10-06] knowledge as, [10-10] time of statement as, [10-07] writing as, [10-09] fault and, [10-10] opinion, of, [10-10] reliance on, [10-10] implied, [11-01]–[11-25] custom, [11-25] evidence admissible, [11-04], [12-19] express term, and, [11-11], [11-16], [11-25] factual, [11-06]–[11-11] requirements, for, [11-06], [11-07]–[11-11] business efficacy, [11-08] clarity, [11-10] consistency, [11-11] equitable, [11-07] necessity, [11-08] obviousness, [11-09] reasonableness, [11-07] frustration and, [33-50] generally, [11-01]–[11-05]
good faith, [2-05], [2-19]–[2-21], [11-14] implied legal duties and, [11-05] intention of parties and, [11-13] law, issue of, [11-03] legal, [11-12]–[11-24] concurrent duties and, [11-16] consistency and, [11-16] distinguished from factual, [11-13] illustrations, [11-14] nature of contract, [11-12] requirements for, [11-12] unjust term, [11-15] unreasonable term, [11-15] onus of proof, [11-02] reasons for, [11-01] usage, [11-25] statutory, [11-17]–[11-24] general, [11-17] goods description, [11-19] exchange of, [11-23] fitness for purpose, [11-20] hire of, [11-23] lease of, [11-23] merchantable quality, [11-21] sale of, [11-18]–[11-22] sample, by, [11-22]
title, [11-18] hire-purchase, [11-23] services, [11-24] intermediate see Intermediate Term procedural, [13-23] promises see Promise types, [10-01] warranties see Warranty Time election, for, [31-05] essence, of, [29-08], [29-09], [29-11], [30-49], [30-50]–[30-53] notice procedure origin of, [29-09] statute and, [29-11] payment, late, [30-51] performance, for, [28-03]–[28-04] repudiation and, [30-29] reasonable fact, question of, [28-04] implied, [28-03] unreasonable, termination after, [31-18] Tort contract and concurrent liability and, [11-16], [18-36], [35-26] damages and, [35-04], [35-26] theory of, [1-07] conversion, of, [27-21], [27-23]
damages, [18-65], [18-69], [35-26] deceit, of, [18-77], see also Misrepresentation fraud, as, [18-12] exclusion clause, application of, [14-16]–[14-17], see also Exclusion Clause illegality and, [25-23] conversion, [27-21], [27-23] detinue, [27-24] trespass, [27-22] minors and, [15-35] negligence, of, [18-29]–[18-36], see also Misrepresentation care, duty of Hedley Byrne principle, [18-30] misrepresentation and, [18-29]– [18-35] contributory negligence and, [35-29], [35-30] damages, measure of, [18-65], [18-69] elements of, [18-29] Hedley Byrne principle, [18-30] restitution and, [38-26]–[38-28], [38-29] waiver of tort and, [38-27] Unconscionability see also Unjust Contracts Legislation application of, [24-11] Australian Consumer Law, [24-15]–[24-19] application of, [24-19] commercial contracts and, [24-19] generally, [24-15] goods and services, [24-17]
rights and remedies, [24-18] unwritten law, [24-16] basis of relief, [24-03] catching bargains, [24-04]–[24-06] disadvantaged persons, [24-06] expectants, with, [24-04] statutory intervention and, [24-05] concept of, [24-01], [24-03], [24-11] disadvantage, special, [24-12] duress and, [22-01], [22-21], [24-08] election and, [37-24] estoppel and, [7-05], [7-17] forfeiture, relief against, and, [24-01], [31-13] general law, under, [24-04]–[24-14] generally, [24-01]–[24-03] good faith and, [2-14] limits on, [24-02] modern law, [24-07]–[24-14] Amadio decision, [24-10] circumstances, variety of, [24-07] guiding principle, search for, [24-08] illustrations, [24-07] independent advice and, [24-06], [24-09], [24-11] inequality of bargaining and, [24-08], [24-09], [24-11] rejection of, [24-09] remedies under, [24-11], [24-12], [24-13] relevance of, [24-01]
relief from, [24-02], [24-03], [24-11], [24-12], [24-13] rescission for, [24-13] restraint of trade and, [24-09], [26-12] statute, under, [24-15]–[24-19] scope of, [24-17] termination of contract and, [31-17] undue influence, and, [23-16], [24-01], [24-04] Undue Influence actual, [23-13]–[23-14] consideration, adequacy of, [23-14] presumed, distinguished from, [23-13] categories of, [23-04] relationship between, [23-07] concept, [23-01] concerns of, [23-03] damages for, no, [23-02] duress, and, [22-01] generally, [23-01]–[23-02] non est factum and, [23-15] presumed, [23-06]–[23-12] generally, [23-06]–[23-07] rebuttal of, [23-11]–[23-12] disadvantageous transaction and, [23-12] proof, burden of, [23-11] relationships generating, [23-08]– [23-10] established classes, [23-08] scope of, [23-09]
special, [23-10] remedies for, [23-02] third party situations, [23-05] unconscionability, and, [23-16], [24-01], [24-04] wife, where guarantor of husband’s debt, [23-05] Unfair Contract Terms see also Unjust Contracts Legislation, Unconscionability abstract control and, [24-26], [24-27], [24-28] Australian Consumer Law, [24-28] provisions of, [24-17] class of contract and, [24-20] concepts, [24-29] consumer contract, [24-29] definitions, [24-29] unfair terms, [24-29], [24-30] void, [24-31] Unilateral Contract, [3-08], [3-49], [3-50] aleatory contract, compared with, [28-38] bilateral, distinguished from, [28-36] consideration for, [6-08], [6-14], [6-15] offer for, [3-49]–[3-50] revocation of, [3-50] option, compared with, [28-37] performance of, [28-36] termination of, [30-65] Unincorporated Association capacity to contract, [15-55]–[15-57]
contracting party, identification of, [15-56] generally, [15-55] nature of, [15-55] reform of law, [15-57] rules of, public policy and, [25-26] Unjust Contracts Legislation see also Unconscionability abstract control and, [24-26], [24-27], [24-28] Contracts Review Act, [24-21]–[24-27] considerations relevant to, [24-24] consumers and, [24-22] general law and, [24-27] generally, [24-21] interpretation of, [24-22] relief under, [24-25] section 7, [24-23] generally, [24-20] good faith and, [24-01], [24-05], [24-17] Unjust Enrichment action, forms of, and, [38-01], [38-08] benefit element, [38-10]–[38-25] acceptance of, [38-14], [38-18], [38-25], [38-35] discharge of contract and, [38-20] failure of contract to materialise and, [38-17] generally, [38-10] incontrovertible, [38-13], [38-35] money as, [38-10], [38-21], [38-24] officious, not, [38-12]
quantum meruit and, [38-17], [38-18], [38-22], [38-23], [38-25] reliance and, [38-15] requested, [38-12] services as, [38-11] types of, [38-10]–[38-15] unenforceable contract and, [9-20], [38-19] unrequested, [38-12] valuation of, [38-35] void contract and, [38-18] damages and, [35-12], [38-28] duress and, [22-07], [22-09], [22-12], [22-13], [22-28] elements of, [38-09] frustration and, [34-10], [34-11], [34-23], [34-26] illegality and, [27-27], [27-28] injustice element, [38-30]–[38-34] benefit and, [38-25] deposit payments and, [38-33] discretion and, [38-04], [38-30] forfeiture, relief against, and, [38-31], [38-32] generally, [38-30] recognised, must be, [38-09] statute and, [38-34] total failure of consideration and, [38-06], [38-18] misrepresentation and, [18-65] mistake and, [20-05], [20-08] Pavey & Matthews, recognition in, [9-20], [38-08] plaintiff ’s expense element, [38-26]–[38-29]
fiduciary obligation, breach of, and, [38-28] primary sense of, [38-26] secondary sense of, [38-26] tort, waiver of, and, [38-27] wrong, breach of contract as, [38-29] privity of contract and, [16-20], [16-21] restitutio in integrum, [18-65], [38-06], [38-13], [38-36] restitution, as basis for, [38-01], [38-08]–[38-09], see also Restitution Statute of Frauds and, [9-20], [38-08] substantial performance and, [28-35] undue influence and, [23-02] Waiver consideration and, [7-26]–[7-29] damages and, [31-06] effect of, [7-29], [31-06] election as, [7-27], [31-06] estoppel and, [7-28] termination and, [31-06] Warranty breach of, failure of consideration by, [13-15] collateral contract, in, [13-07] collateral term, as, [13-05] contractually binding promise, as, [13-07] defined, [13-05] distinguished from condition, [13-03]–[13-09] essential promise, as, [13-07]
goods, sale of, in, [13-05]